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27,571 | palish | 2007-06-12T19:48:20 | Ask News.YC: Are you getting an iPhone? | null | 5 | 17 | [
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27,575 | szczupak | 2007-06-12T19:56:45 | please delete this post. | null | http://spicy.libero.it/gallery/spy_gal954/pg6.phtml | 1 | 0 | [
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27,580 | dawie | 2007-06-12T20:00:03 | TeamSnap makes it easy to manage your team - (37signals) | null | http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/460-teamsnap-makes-it-easy-to-manage-your-team | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,594 | gibsonf1 | 2007-06-12T20:40:15 | eBay thinks outside with eBox | null | http://news.com.com/eBay+thinks+outside+with+eBox/2100-1032_3-6190508.html?tag=nefd.lede | 10 | 5 | [
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27,596 | gibsonf1 | 2007-06-12T20:42:10 | Yahoo shareholders reject censorship, executive pay proposals | null | http://news.com.com/8301-10784_3-9728648-7.html | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | no_article | null | null | null | null | 2024-11-08T13:13:36 | null | train |
27,608 | msgbeepa | 2007-06-12T21:20:36 | Web 2.0: Create Your Own Software Profile | null | http://media-sight.net/2007/06/create-your-own-software-profile.html | 1 | -1 | null | null | true | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,610 | dawie | 2007-06-12T21:38:48 | No iPhone SDK Means No Killer iPhone Apps | null | http://gizmodo.com/gadgets/fast-and-furious/no-iphone-sdk-means-no-iphone-killer-apps-267899.php | 4 | 2 | [
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27,611 | palish | 2007-06-12T21:40:20 | null | 15 | 2 | [
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||
27,614 | far33d | 2007-06-12T21:44:52 | The Margin Manifesto, Part I | null | http://www.foundread.com/view/the-margin-manifesto | 4 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,615 | palish | 2007-06-12T21:48:37 | I Hacked News.YC | null | http://www.classbug.com:3000/home/yc | 43 | null | [
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27,623 | ryantmulligan | 2007-06-12T22:00:40 | What about health insurance? | null | 10 | 16 | [
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27,642 | budu3 | 2007-06-12T23:17:17 | Amazon announces Alexa Web Search service | null | http://www.amazon.com/gp/browse.html?node=269962011 | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | no_error | Cloud Computing Services - Amazon Web Services (AWS) | null | null |
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| 2024-11-07T14:57:01 | en | train |
27,651 | joshwa | 2007-06-13T00:23:32 | no confirmation on submit bookmarklet means this is an accidental submission I can't delete. | null | http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27594 | 1 | -1 | null | null | true | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,657 | bootload | 2007-06-13T00:43:10 | Not all along for ride with Google gears (is it what users want? will they bother installing?) | null | http://www.theage.com.au/news/biztech/not-all-along-for-ride-with-google-gears/2007/06/04/1180809431861.html | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | no_error | Not all along for ride with Google gears | 2007-06-05T00:00:00+00:00 | Simon Sharwood | By Simon SharwoodJune 5, 2007 — 10.00amGoogle Gears, a new application that some see as a direct assault on Microsoft's desktop software market, has had a lukewarm reception from local developers. Released last week, Gears allows users to access web applications such as email and calendars whether or not they are connected to the internet. "Offline access is something we get asked about once or twice a month by our customers, but they see it as a pie-in-the-sky kind of thing," said Soren Harsen, head of engineering at Sydney software developer Atlassian. Mr Harsen said Atlassian, the world's pre-eminent vendor of enterprise wikis, saw a role for the offline access Gears enables as a tool to help workers continue to use a wiki while travelling, instead of reverting to desktop applications. "The ability to provide offline access to road warrior-style people is the capability people will be interested in," Mr Harsen said, before noting that the idea is not entirely new and has failed in the past. "Previous versions of Internet Explorer used to be able to do this with its offline cache," he said. "But realistically no one ever used it. My own experience was that if you have a long set-up process and make the synchronisation between online and offline anything other than completely automatic, you will have a really hard time getting people to adopt it." The chief technology officer of Aconex, Ken McDonell, said he could imagine several uses for Gears. "Aconex is used to manage documents at remote mining and drilling locations," Dr McDonell said. "With this type of development, documents could be downloaded, processed offline at the mine site and then synchronised with the live application later." The chief executive of Sydney social networking site Tangler.com, Martin Wells, described Gears as "the best offline product at this time" and "a sophisticated solution", but said not everyone would want to download it and that web application providers that expected users to do so may struggle. "We feel a download should always be something that is an option for your users," Mr Wells said. "Certainly Tangler would not rely on users doing that." He said Tangler.com would investigate using Gears to improve the performance of its service. "We are a product that relies on people discussing things online, so catching up on Tangler reading offline is something we are looking at," he said. Rob Sharp, lead developer with The Sound Alliance, a publisher of music websites including fasterlouder.com.au, shared Mr Wells' concern about the need to download Gears. "Until everyone that uses Internet Explorer installs it, we are not going to be able to use it," he said. | 2024-11-07T23:06:34 | en | train |
27,666 | lupin_sansei | 2007-06-13T02:10:03 | Real World HTML Alignment | null | http://icanhascheezburger.com/2007/06/12/lolcat-alignright/ | 8 | 2 | [
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27,668 | IMorgothI12 | 2007-06-13T02:28:45 | Slashdot and Search Engine Patent | null | http://www.wired.com/politics/law/news/2007/06/location_patent | 1 | 2 | [
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27,672 | joshwa | 2007-06-13T02:55:24 | James Hong: Facebook Apps | null | http://james.hotornot.com/2007/06/facebook-apps.html | 4 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,674 | lupin_sansei | 2007-06-13T03:06:21 | Why There Are No Indian Software Startups | null | http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Opinion/Sunday_Specials/Review/A_myth_called_the_Indian_programmer/articleshow/msid-1633868,curpg-1.cms | 8 | 8 | [
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27,675 | staunch | 2007-06-13T03:08:54 | How to get rich in America: A dozen entrepreneurs, a dozen success stories | null | http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2007/moneymag/0706/gallery.success_stories.moneymag/index.html | 6 | 1 | [
27800
] | null | null | no_error | How to get rich in America - Smoothie operators (1) | null | By Josh Hyatt, Money Magazine | Kyle and Aaron Campos, 27 and 33 Buckeye, Ariz. Lesson: If you must borrow from your friends and family, keep it formal The downside of mixing business with blood should be obvious - or at least it will be when you start getting late-night calls from Aunt Tillie asking about your schedule for an IPO. But hitting up relatives is how a lot of businesses get going. It's what Kyle Campos and his older brother Aaron had to do. In 2004 the brothers, both software engineers, quit their jobs in Santa Barbara and decamped to Buckeye, Ariz. After visiting relatives there earlier that year, Kyle had become convinced that the town was "filled with wide-open opportunities," especially compared with the software biz. "The tech sector was getting hit hard," says Aaron. "I didn't have a good feeling."Aaron and Kyle, neither of whom had run a business before, began brainstorming about starting one together. Both had frequented a smoothie joint in Santa Barbara, and they fell in love with the idea of starting their own. They found an industry consultant online who helped them write a business plan. Then they hired an experienced designer. The Main Squeeze would be a 1,200-square-foot store with hardwood floors and stainless-steel tables. And it would cost more than the $130,000 they had saved. That's when they drew up a list of 40 friends and relatives they could solicit as investors. "We wanted it to seem like we were offering them an authentic business opportunity," notes Kyle. For that they turned to CircleLending, a site that helps informal borrowers create formal lending deals. The siblings spent $99 to set up a loan agreement, choosing an attractive interest rate (9%), a repayment schedule they figured they could afford (either five or seven years) and a $1,000 minimum. Four folks each lent them $1,000, and another four each threw in $5,000. Last year the Campos brothers whipped up a profitable $210,000 in sales, and they've been paying their investors on schedule for close to two years. Says Kyle: "Not one has complained." | 2024-11-08T11:37:09 | en | train |
27,676 | lupin_sansei | 2007-06-13T03:12:57 | Why your Workplace May Matter More than your Skills | null | http://www.webfoot.com/blog/2007/02/16/demarco-and-lister/ | 3 | 3 | [
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27,677 | staunch | 2007-06-13T03:16:00 | iinnovate Podcast: Michael Arrington, founder of TechCrunch | null | http://iinnovate.blogspot.com/2007/06/michael-arrington-founder-of-techcrunch.html#links | 4 | 1 | [
27684
] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,678 | staunch | 2007-06-13T03:17:18 | iinnovate Podcast: Chip Heath, Author of Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die | null | http://iinnovate.blogspot.com/2007/05/chip-heath-author-of-made-to-stick.html#links | 2 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,679 | staunch | 2007-06-13T03:17:49 | iinnovate Podcast: Max Levchin, Founder of Slide and Co-Founder of Paypal | null | http://iinnovate.blogspot.com/2007/05/max-levchin-founder-of-slide-and-co.html#links | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,696 | mhidalgo | 2007-06-13T04:47:45 | Evolvist.com looking for a hacker for the Summer in NYC | null | 2 | 3 | [
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|
27,701 | mwerty | 2007-06-13T04:57:41 | Deliver to the world what you would buy if you were on the other end. - Charlie Munger speech at USC Law School. | null | http://valueinvestingworld.blogspot.com/2007/05/charlie-munger-usc-law-school.html | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | no_error | Charlie Munger - USC Law School Commencement - May 13, 2007 | null | null | Here are my notes from Charlie Munger's keynote address. I didn't originally intend for it to be a semi-transcript but I had to take Charlie's advice: "Deliver to the world what you would buy if you were on the other end." And so that's what I did.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Charlie Munger - USC School of Law Commencement - May 13, 2007Safest way to get what you want is to deserve what you want.Deliver to the world what you would buy if you were on the other end.There is huge pleasure in life to be obtained from getting deserved trust. And the way to get it is to deliver what you would want to buy if the circumstances were reversed.There’s no love that’s so right as admiration based love and that love should include the instructive dead.Wisdom acquisition is a moral duty. It’s not something you do just to advance in life. As a corollary to that proposition which is very important, it means that you are hooked for lifetime learning. And without lifetime learning, you people are not going to do very well. You are not going to get very far in life based on what you already know. You’re going to advance in life by what you learn after you leave here.I constantly see people rise in life who are not the smartest, sometimes not even the most diligent, but they are learning machines. They go to bed every night a little wiser than they were when they got up and boy does that help, particularly when you have a long run ahead of you.Just as civilization can progress only when it invents the method of invention, you can progress only when you learn the method of learning.Nothing has served me better in my long life than continuous learning.I went through life constantly practicing (because if you don’t practice it, you lose it) the multi-disciplinary approach and I can’t tell you what that’s done for me. It’s made life more fun, it’s made me more constructive, its made me more helpful to others, its made me enormously rich. You name it, that attitude really helps. Now, there are dangers in it because it works so well that if you do it, you will frequently find you’re sitting in the presence of some other expert, maybe even an expert superior to you (supervising you), and you’ll know more than he does about his own specialty, a lot more. You’ll see the correct answer and he’s missed it. That is a very dangerous position to be in. You can cause enormous offense by being right in a way that causes somebody else to lose face. And I never found a perfect way to solve that problem. My advice to you is to learn sometimes to keep your light under a bushel.Marcus Cicero is famous for saying that the man who doesn’t know what happened before he was born goes through life like a child. That is a very correct idea. If you generalize Cicero, as I think one should, there are all these other things that you should know in addition to history. And those other things are the big ideas in all the other disciplines. It doesn’t help just to know them enough so you can [repeat] them back on an exam and get an A. You have to learn these things in such a way that they’re in a mental latticework in your head and you automatically use them for the rest of your life. If you do that I solemnly promise you that one day you’ll be walking down the street and you’ll look to your right and left and you’ll think “my heavenly days, I’m now one of the of the few most competent people in my whole age cohort.” If you don’t do it, many of the brightest of you will live in the middle ranks or in the shallows.The way complex adaptive systems work and the way mental constructs work is that problems frequently get easier, I’d even say usually are easier to solve if you turn them around in reverse. In other words, if you want to help India, the question you should ask is not “how can I help India”, it’s “what is doing the worst damage in India? What will automatically do the worst damage and how do I avoid it?”In life, unless you’re more gifted than Einstein, inversion will help you solve problems.Let me use a little inversion now. What will really fail in life? What do you want to avoid? Such an easy answer: sloth and unreliability. If you’re unreliable it doesn’t matter what your virtues are. Doing what you have faithfully engaged to do should be an automatic part of your conduct. You want to avoid sloth and unreliability.Another thing I think should be avoided is extremely intense ideology because it cabbages up one’s mind. You see it a lot with T.V. preachers (many have minds made of cabbage) but it can also happen with political ideology. When you’re young it’s easy to drift into loyalties and when you announce that you’re a loyal member and you start shouting the orthodox ideology out, what you’re doing is pounding it in, pounding it in, and you’re gradually ruining your mind. So you want to be very, very careful of this ideology. It’s a big danger. In my mind, I have a little example I use whenever I think about ideology. The example is these Scandinavia canoeists who succeeded in taming all the rapids of Scandinavia and they thought they would tackle the whirlpools of the Aron (sp) Rapids here in the United States. The death rate was 100%. A big whirlpool is not something you want to go into, and I think the same is true about a really deep ideology. I have what I call an iron prescription that helps me keep sane when I naturally drift toward preferring one ideology over another and that is: I say that I’m not entitled to have an opinion on this subject unless I can state the arguments against my position better than the people who support it. I think only when I’ve reached that state am I qualified to speak. This business of not drifting into extreme ideology is a very, very important thing in life.Another thing that does one in, of course, is the self-serving bias to which we’re all subject. You think the true little me is entitled to do what it wants to do. And, for instance, why shouldn’t the true little me overspend my income. Mozart became the most famous composer in the world but was utterly miserable most of the time, and one of the reasons was because he always overspent his income. If Mozart can’t get by with this kind of asinine conduct, I don’t think you should try.Generally speaking, envy, resentment, revenge and self-pity are disastrous modes of thoughts. Self-pity gets fairly close to paranoia, and paranoia is one of the very hardest things to reverse. You do not want to drift into self-pity. It’s a ridiculous way to behave and when you avoid it, you get a great advantage over everybody else or almost everybody else because self-pity is a standard condition, and yet you can train yourself out of it.Of course the self-serving bias is something you want to get out of yourself. Thinking that what’s good for you is good for the wider civilization and rationalizing all these ridiculous conclusions based on this subconscious tendency to serve one’s self is a terribly inaccurate way to think. Of course you want to drive that out of yourself because you want to be wise, not foolish. You also have to allow for the self-serving bias of everybody else because most people are not going to remove it all that successfully, the human condition being what it is. If you don’t allow for self-serving bias in your conduct, again you’re a fool.The correct answer to situations like [the Saloman case] was given by Ben Franklin, “If you would persuade, appeal to interest not to reason.”Another thing, perverse incentives. You do not want to be in a perverse incentive system that’s causing you to behave more and more foolishly or worse and worse - incentives are too powerful a control over human cognition or human behavior. If you’re in one, I don’t have a solution for you. You’ll have to figure it out for yourself, but it’s a significant problem.Perverse associations, also to be avoided. You particularly want to avoid working under somebody you really don’t admire and don’t want to be like. We’re all subject to control to some extent by authority figures, particularly authority figures that are rewarding us. Getting to work under people we admire requires some talent. The way I solved that is I figured out the people I did admire and I maneuvered cleverly without criticizing anybody so I was working entirely under people I admired. You’re outcome in life will be way more satisfactory and way better if you work under people you really admire. The alternative is not a good idea.Objectivity maintenance. Darwin paid particular attention to disconfirming evidence. Objectivity maintenance routines are totally required in life if you’re going to be a great thinker. There, we're talking about Darwin’s special attention to disconfirming evidence and also about checklist routines. Checklist routines avoid a lot of errors. You should have all this elementary wisdom and then you should go through a mental checklist in order to use it. There is no other procedure in the world that will work as well.The last idea that I found very important is that I realized very early that non-egality would work better in the parts of the world that I wanted to inhabit. What do I mean by non-egality? I mean John Wooden when he was the number one basketball coach in the world. He just said to the bottom five players that you don’t get to play. The top seven did all the playing. Well the top seven learned more, remember the learning machine, they learned more because they did all the playing. And when he got to that system he won more than he had ever won before. I think the game of life, in many respects, is about getting a lot of practice into the hands of the people that have the most aptitude to learn and the most tendency to be learning machines. And if you want the very highest reaches of human civilization, that’s where you have to go. You do not want to choose a brain surgeon for your child from 50 applicants where all of them just take turns doing the procedure. You don’t want your airplanes designed that way. You don’t want your Berkshire Hathaway’s run that way. You want to get the power into the right people.[Told the story of Max Planck and his chauffeur. After winning the Nobel Prize, Planck toured around giving a speech. The chauffeur memorized the speech and asked if he could give it for him, pretending to be Planck, in Munich and Planck would pretend to be the chauffeur. Planck let him do it and after the speech someone asked a tough question. The real chauffeur said that he couldn’t believe someone in such an advanced city like Munich would ask such an elementary question and as such, he was going to ask his chauffeur (Planck) to reply].In this world we have two kinds of knowledge. One is Planck knowledge, the people who really know. They’ve paid the dues, they have the aptitude. And then we’ve got chauffeur knowledge. They have learned the talk. They may have a big head of hair, they may have fine temper in the voice, they’ll make a hell of an impression. But in the end, all they have is chauffeur knowledge. I think I’ve just described practically every politician in the United States.And you are going to have the problem in your life of getting the responsibility into the people with the Planck knowledge [and away from the people with the chauffeur knowledge]. And there are huge forces working against you. My generation has failed you a bit…..but you wouldn’t like it to be too easy now would you?Another thing that I found is that an intense interest in the subject is indispensable if you’re really going to excel in it. I could force myself to be fairly good in a lot of things but I couldn’t be really good at anything where I didn’t have an intense interest. So to some extent, you’re going to have to follow me. If at all feasible, drift into something where you have an intense interest.Another thing you have to do, of course, is to have a lot of assiduity. I like that word because it means: sit down on your ass until you do it. Two partners that I chose for one little phase in my life had the following rule when they created a design, build, construction team. They sat down and said, two-man partnership, divide everything equally, here’s the rule: if ever we’re behind in commitments to other people, we will both work 14 hours a day until we’re caught up. Needless to say, that firm didn’t fail. The people died very rich. It’s such a simple idea.Another thing, of course, is that life will have terrible blows in it, horrible blows, unfair blows. And some people recover and others don’t. And there I think the attitude of Epictetus is the best. He said that every missed chance in life was an opportunity to behave well, every missed chance in life was an opportunity to learn something, and that your duty was not to be submerged in self-pity, but to utilize the terrible blow in constructive fashion. That is a very good idea. You may remember the epitaph which Epictetus left for himself: “Here lies Epictetus, a slave maimed in body, the ultimate in poverty, and the favored of the gods.”I’ve got a final little idea because I’m all for prudence as well as opportunism. [He talked about his grandfather, Judge Munger, who under spent his income all his life and left his grandmother in comfortable circumstances, which he had to because there were no pensions for federal judges back then. Along the way, he bailed out Charlie’s uncle’s bank back in the ‘30s by taking over 1/3 of his good assets in exchange for bad assets of the bank. He remembered his grandfather’s example in college when he came across] Housman’s poem:
The thoughts of othersWere light and fleeting,Of lovers’ meetingOr luck or fame.Mine were of trouble,And mine were steady,So I was readyWhen trouble came.You can say, who wants to go through life anticipating trouble? Well I did. All my life I’ve gone through life anticipating trouble. And here I am, going along in my 84th year and like Epictetus, I’ve had a favored life. It didn’t make me unhappy to anticipate trouble all the time and be ready to perform adequately if trouble came. It didn’t hurt me at all. In fact it helped me.The last idea I want to give to you…..is that this is not the highest form that a civilization can reach. The highest form a civilization can reach is a seamless web of deserved trust. Not much procedure, just totally reliable people correctly trusting one another. That’s the way an operating room works at the Mayo Clinic. So never forget, when you’re a lawyer, that you may be rewarded for selling this stuff but you don’t have to buy. What you want in your own life is a seamless web of deserved trust. And so if your proposed marriage contract has 47 pages, my suggestion is you not enter.Well that’s enough for one graduation. I hope these ruminations of an old man are useful to you. In the end I’m like an Old Valiant for Truth in The Pilgrim’s Progress. “My sword I leave to him who can wear it.” | 2024-11-08T02:34:22 | en | train |
27,702 | waleedka | 2007-06-13T05:06:45 | Plug & Play Tech Incubator in Sunnyvale. Are they any good? | null | 4 | 2 | [
27703
] | null | null | invalid_url | null | null | null | null | 2024-11-08T16:37:59 | null | train |
|
27,704 | donna | 2007-06-13T05:27:34 | Women have less access to capital - Researchers explore pursuit of angel funding | null | http://www.wtc-sf.org/news/23/ | 2 | 2 | [
27708,
27750
] | null | null | no_error | Career Tips | Women's Technology | null | null |
The interview
levels the playing field. No matter where you went to school,
no matter what your GPA is, no matter how much experience you have,
no matter who you know--if you aren't able to interview successfully,
you won't get the job. Following are some insights designed to help
you successfully interview and get the job you want--and then negotiate
the very best job offer!
Human Resource
Articles
It
can't hurt to post your resume online
The major job destination sites such as Monster, CareerBuilder and HotJobs aggregate thousands of job leads for you,
while letting recruiters sift through thousands of resumes easily,
potentially finding yours.
Your
boss may be watching
Companies are
rushing to sign up for high-tech tools that let them monitor and
control what their employees do online. Here's why -- and how
you can profit from the trend.
Read
more...
© Copyright 2024 Edan Search Group. All rights reserved.
Unauthorized duplication in part or
whole strictly prohibited
by international copyright law.
| 2024-11-08T17:20:26 | en | train |
27,707 | brett | 2007-06-13T05:50:37 | Ron Conway: Third-rate VCs are paying off entrepreneurs | null | http://venturebeat.com/2007/06/12/ron-conway-third-rate-vcs-are-paying-off-entrepreneurs/ | 19 | 12 | [
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27,709 | andrew_null | 2007-06-13T06:03:50 | Andrew Chen: How to fool VCs - Confusing them with date ranges and hits/pageviews/uniques | null | http://andrewchen.typepad.com/andrew_chens_blog/2007/06/how_to_fool_vcs.html | 9 | 1 | [
27724
] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,713 | bootload | 2007-06-13T06:19:29 | 'Dreaming in code' retort (KDS reply to joel spolsky review of dreaming in code) | null | http://www.webfoot.com/blog/2007/01/22/dreaming-in-code/ | 2 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,725 | staunch | 2007-06-13T07:23:48 | Practical Common Lisp author Peter Seibel writing "Coders at Work" companion to Livingston's Founders at Work | null | http://www.gigamonkeys.com/blog/2007/06/12/change-of-plans.html | 7 | 1 | [
27822
] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,735 | keiretsu | 2007-06-13T08:13:11 | Dumping that good-for-nothing co-founder of yours | null | 1 | 1 | [
27736
] | null | null | invalid_url | null | null | null | null | 2024-11-08T16:37:59 | null | train |
|
27,739 | lupin_sansei | 2007-06-13T08:39:57 | Startup Idea: Car Related Mobile Applications | null | http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070606/lf_nm/texting_dc | 2 | 1 | [
27742
] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,743 | kul | 2007-06-13T09:09:19 | A specific example of the power of one's network | null | http://www.kulveer.co.uk/2007/06/specific-example-of-power-of-ones.html | 17 | 4 | [
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27,748 | szczupak | 2007-06-13T09:53:17 | An online game startup that really helps to save electricity | null | http://www.businesshackers.com/2007/06/12/an-online-game-startup-that-really-helps-to-save-electricity/ | 3 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,752 | alexandru | 2007-06-13T10:10:49 | Exercise Thinking Outside the Box and Apply It to a Start-up | null | http://brickblogging.com/2007/06/13/exercise-thinking-outside-the-box/ | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,756 | rms | 2007-06-13T10:40:18 | Just about the best place to find freelance programmers or designers | null | http://programmermeetdesigner.com/ | 3 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,758 | bootload | 2007-06-13T10:53:59 | How did you meet your co-founder? (or "How *could* you meet potential co-founder(s)?") | null | 3 | 13 | [
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|
27,765 | gibsonf1 | 2007-06-13T11:43:55 | Tech leaders meeting with media execs / Copyright protection, ads are expected to be major topics | null | http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/06/13/BUG77QE5211.DTL | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,768 | gibsonf1 | 2007-06-13T11:49:00 | Hated blogger leaves U.S., threatens lawsuits | null | http://news.com.com/Hated+blogger+leaves+U.S.%2C+threatens+lawsuits/2100-1026_3-6190628.html?tag=nefd.lede | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,770 | staunch | 2007-06-13T11:51:42 | Jason Calacanis: Building his Site by Paying for User Generated Content | null | http://greenhouse.mahalo.com/ | 5 | 3 | [
27824,
27772,
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] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,771 | gibsonf1 | 2007-06-13T11:52:43 | Torvalds: Solaris could nudge Linux to GPL 3 | null | http://news.com.com/Torvalds+Solaris+could+nudge+Linux+to+GPL+3/2100-7344_3-6190618.html?tag=nefd.top | 2 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,773 | gibsonf1 | 2007-06-13T11:59:15 | Ad software maker OpenAds girds to take on Google | null | http://www.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUSN1231267320070613 | 8 | 3 | [
27865
] | null | null | http_other_error | reuters.com | null | null | Please enable JS and disable any ad blocker | 2024-11-08T02:32:57 | null | train |
27,775 | gibsonf1 | 2007-06-13T12:05:37 | ZFS: Ten reasons to reformat your hard drives | null | http://www.tech-recipes.com/rx/1446/zfs_ten_reasons_to_reformat_your_hard_drives | 5 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,776 | gibsonf1 | 2007-06-13T12:06:43 | Wired News Benchmarks Show Safari 3 Is Slower Than IE 7, Firefox | null | http://blog.wired.com/monkeybites/2007/06/wired_news_benc.html | 4 | 4 | [
27806,
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] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,778 | gibsonf1 | 2007-06-13T12:09:16 | Summer's here, the Web surfing's fine (Digital Kids) | null | http://news.com.com/Summers+here%2C+the+Web+surfings+fine/2009-1025_3-6190622.html?tag=nefd.lede | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,786 | codeLullaby | 2007-06-13T13:54:08 | Open Source Flash Conference-For everyone interested in RIA | null | http://osflash.org/blog/2007_06_12_open_source_flash_conference_-_june_15th | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,792 | keiretsu | 2007-06-13T14:35:32 | When you pitch to a VC, should you mark up or mark down the total development cost? | null | 1 | 1 | [
27794
] | null | null | invalid_url | null | null | null | null | 2024-11-08T16:37:59 | null | train |
|
27,793 | farmer | 2007-06-13T14:36:50 | Raganwald: Still failing, still learning | null | http://weblog.raganwald.com/2007/06/still-failing-still-learning.html | 14 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,798 | imp | 2007-06-13T14:41:51 | MySQL Query Profiler | null | http://dev.mysql.com/tech-resources/articles/using-new-query-profiler.html | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,801 | Readmore | 2007-06-13T14:49:48 | Apple to integrate iTunes into Bebo | null | http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/06/13/apple-to-integrate-itunes-into-bebo/ | 3 | 0 | null | null | null | no_error | Apple To Integrate iTunes Into Bebo | TechCrunch | 2007-06-13T12:29:16+00:00 | Contributor | Apple has announced a deal that will see the its popular iTunes service embedded into Bebo.
According to FT.com, Bebo’s 8.8m users in the UK and Ireland will be able to buy music directly from the profile of any musician who has a Bebo profile and whose music is available on iTunes.
The deal is a first for Apple. Bebo is a market leader in social networking in the United Kingdom despite not taking off to the same extent elsewhere.
It may not seem like major news, but to put it in perspective it’s on half hour leading story rotation on BBC World as I write this. It may also be indicative of a new direction for Apple; the wildly popular Facebook F8 is delivering benefits to many music related sites. To date Apple has remained silent in regards to its position on embracing the growing trend of social networking site integration.
| 2024-11-08T08:11:04 | en | train |
27,802 | transburgh | 2007-06-13T14:54:53 | Start a Company When You Are Young | null | http://www.gobignetwork.com/wil/2007/6/13/start-a-company-when-you-are-young/10166/view.aspx | 9 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,803 | Readmore | 2007-06-13T14:59:26 | How Apple helped Disney start working like a startup | null | http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/116/features-brave-new-mouse.html | 4 | 2 | [
27861
] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,817 | andreyf | 2007-06-13T15:48:06 | Scott Adams startup idea: solves the energy crisis, reduces global warming, and virtually eliminates drunk driving | null | http://dilbertblog.typepad.com/the_dilbert_blog/2007/06/how_i_solved_th.html | 3 | 4 | [
27938,
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27,821 | joshwa | 2007-06-13T16:04:32 | Ad Networks: Synthetic channels | null | http://lsvp.wordpress.com/2007/06/11/ad-networks-synthetic-channels/ | 2 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,831 | danw | 2007-06-13T17:21:55 | Guidemap to the Goldrush: A Mobile Welcome to Apple iPhone, Dell, Google, Blyk and others entering | null | http://communities-dominate.blogs.com/brands/2007/06/mobile_welcome_.html | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,832 | Mistone | 2007-06-13T17:30:55 | Top 10 Pitch Meeting 'No-Nos' | null | http://www.foundread.com/view/top-10-pitch-meeting | 3 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,833 | ashu | 2007-06-13T17:43:51 | Buxfer named Online Banking Report "Best of the Web" | null | http://www.netbanker.com/2007/06/myspace_meets_quicken_whats_happening_in_social_personal_finance.html | 13 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,837 | wendyp | 2007-06-13T17:59:28 | An Assortment of Venture Capital Links | null | http://www.folksonomy.org/2007/06/an_assortment_of_venture_capit/ | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,840 | far33d | 2007-06-13T18:09:59 | Clean tech firms dig for venture deals at event | null | http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/clean-tech-firms-dig-venture/story.aspx?guid=%7B4CC5BADB%2D145B%2D4954%2D957D%2DC9FE3E21B8D6%7D&siteid=yhoof | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,846 | _vivv | 2007-06-13T18:29:54 | Looking to choose a language & framework-- | null | null | 2 | 6 | [
27868,
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] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,852 | dawie | 2007-06-13T18:50:50 | Cover Flow and the scrolling horizontal subnav at the new Apple.com | null | http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/464-cover-flow-and-the-scrolling-horizontal-subnav-at-the-new-applecom | 2 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,857 | graham-miln | 2007-06-13T19:00:03 | A solution for company e-mail signatures | null | http://www.dssw.co.uk/blog/2007/06/13/a-solution-for-company-e-mail-signatures/ | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,864 | sharpshoot | 2007-06-13T19:30:00 | Do schools kill creativity? | null | http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/66 | 15 | 10 | [
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27,873 | far33d | 2007-06-13T20:25:44 | Part II of the Margin Manifesto | null | http://www.foundread.com/view/part-ii-of-the | 5 | 0 | null | null | null | no_article | null | null | null | null | 2024-11-08T12:47:01 | null | train |
27,875 | richcollins | 2007-06-13T20:32:13 | Is the development of automated tests a waste of time for a startup? | null | 13 | 45 | [
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|
27,879 | msgbeepa | 2007-06-13T20:45:15 | New Features At Google Analytics | null | http://www.avinio.blogspot.com/2007/06/new-features-at-google-analytics.html | 1 | -1 | null | null | true | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,883 | brett | 2007-06-13T20:52:53 | Paul Buchheit: The dogmatic programmer - when software becomes religion | null | http://paulbuchheit.blogspot.com/2007/06/dogmatic-programmer-when-software.html | 11 | 5 | [
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27,890 | toffer | 2007-06-13T21:11:56 | According to Alexa, iLike has lost 70% of their Web site traffic since launching on Facebook | null | http://plentyoffish.wordpress.com/2007/06/13/facebook-ilike/ | 19 | 12 | [
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27,892 | jcwentz | 2007-06-13T21:12:40 | Chime.TV: A Prettier Way to Watch YouTube | null | http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/06/12/chimetv-a-prettier-way-to-watch-youtube/ | 2 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,906 | szczupak | 2007-06-13T21:36:14 | A startup to download demos, trailers and even full version of games | null | http://www.businesshackers.com/2007/06/13/have-you-heard-about-greatgamesexperiment/ | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,907 | ChristianPerry | 2007-06-13T21:36:48 | Co-founders wanted for TicketMaster killer. | null | http://zaptix.blogspot.com/ | 23 | 22 | [
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27,919 | wendyp | 2007-06-13T22:20:43 | 10 most and least friendly countries to small business | null | http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fsb/fsb_archive/2007/06/01/100049637/index.htm | 6 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,925 | frapp | 2007-06-13T22:42:34 | Did Facebook Underestimate the Platform's Success? | null | http://www.webware.com/8301-1_109-9729008-2.html?tag=blog | 4 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,929 | benhoyt | 2007-06-13T23:12:28 | Don't click this: Why modal dialog boxes are evil | null | http://sg.geocities.com/viceadmiralcongo/dont_click.htm | 1 | 1 | [
27932
] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,930 | gaborcselle | 2007-06-13T23:13:27 | What we Are: A bunch of monkeys [YouTube] | null | http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a15KgyXBX24 | 1 | -1 | null | null | true | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,942 | amichail | 2007-06-14T00:18:26 | Are web 2.0 and sound software engineering practices incompatible? | null | 1 | 6 | [
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] | null | null | invalid_url | null | null | null | null | 2024-11-08T16:37:59 | null | train |
|
27,946 | jcwentz | 2007-06-14T00:29:10 | Slide is #1 in widgets (RockYou #2) | null | http://mashable.com/2007/06/13/comscore-widget-metrix/ | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,950 | gibsonf1 | 2007-06-14T00:36:35 | Sun supper offer appeals to Torvalds (Linux + Solaris?) | null | http://news.com.com/8301-10784_3-9729329-7.html | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,951 | gibsonf1 | 2007-06-14T00:38:08 | eBay pins global e-commerce push on Skype and PayPal | null | http://news.com.com/8301-10784_3-9729018-7.html | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,953 | gibsonf1 | 2007-06-14T00:40:39 | eBay in patent fight over 'Buy It Now' | null | http://www.usatoday.com/tech/techinvestor/industry/2007-06-13-ebay-buy-it-now-patent_N.htm?loc=interstitialskip | 2 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,954 | bootload | 2007-06-14T00:50:11 | Day without Google fails to impress (AltSearchEngine day challenge users to not use big 5 search engines) | null | http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/retrospective_day_without_google_lexxe_powerset.php | 2 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,955 | bootload | 2007-06-14T00:53:31 | Your own online office (choice of available tools) | null | http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/rolling_your_own_online_office.php#more | 5 | 0 | null | null | null | no_article | null | null | null | null | 2024-11-08T17:20:04 | null | train |
27,956 | bootload | 2007-06-14T00:56:33 | Implicit web (the things we pay attention to, amazon, google & attentiontrust) | null | http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/the_implicit_web_lastfm_amazon_google.php | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,960 | amichail | 2007-06-14T01:16:26 | Canada gets poor grade for failing to innovate | null | http://www.thestar.com/Business/article/224616 | 5 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,961 | null | 2007-06-14T01:17:13 | null | null | null | null | null | null | [
"true"
] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,962 | henryw | 2007-06-14T01:25:03 | What javascript framework do you use? | null | 3 | 7 | [
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28097,
28042,
28027
] | null | null | invalid_url | null | null | null | null | 2024-11-08T16:37:59 | null | train |
|
27,966 | null | 2007-06-14T01:44:41 | null | null | null | null | null | [
27967
] | [
"true"
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27,972 | dbosson | 2007-06-14T01:59:16 | Paul Gram, his following, and the hacker partiality | null | 3 | 19 | [
27993,
27986,
27973,
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] | null | null | invalid_url | null | null | null | null | 2024-11-08T16:37:59 | null | train |
|
27,983 | farmer | 2007-06-14T02:38:52 | AT&T to target pirated content on its network | null | http://www.latimes.com/technology/la-fi-piracy13jun13,1,5531531.story?ctrack=1&cset=true | 2 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,985 | officeoval | 2007-06-14T03:00:03 | OfficeOval launches a play stock market for political symbols (presidential candidates) | null | http://officeoval.com | 1 | 0 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,997 | vlad | 2007-06-14T03:51:48 | Pg adds a 'delete' feature for submitters; 'dead' is now for moderators | null | http://ycombinator.com/newsnews.html#13jun07 | 4 | 5 | [
28049,
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] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
27,998 | null | 2007-06-14T03:55:07 | null | null | null | null | null | null | [
"true"
] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
28,024 | ashu | 2007-06-14T07:19:47 | Buxfer features as one of the promising social money startups in Wall Street Journal | null | http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118177906703834565.html | 11 | 4 | [
28204,
31214,
28117
] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
28,030 | ivan | 2007-06-14T07:47:22 | Many people at news.yc with interesting thoughts have no contact data in their profile. It's a pity. | null | 12 | 32 | [
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28060,
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] | null | null | invalid_url | null | null | null | null | 2024-11-08T16:37:59 | null | train |
|
28,032 | mattjaynes | 2007-06-14T07:49:28 | Paul Buchheit: Seth Godin on 'Vibe' | null | http://paulbuchheit.blogspot.com/2007/06/quick-vibe.html | 7 | 5 | [
28070,
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] | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
28,034 | mattjaynes | 2007-06-14T08:00:17 | [cartoon] How Variable Width Could Save Your Relationship | null | http://xkcd.com/c276.html | 1 | 0 | [
28045
] | null | true | null | null | null | null | null | null | null | train |
28,037 | keven | 2007-06-14T08:16:53 | Damon Dash: After MySpace sold for $580 million, we said, damn, we gotta get us some of that. | null | http://blog.pmarca.com/2007/06/quote_of_the_we.html | 3 | 0 | null | null | null | no_error | Marc Andreessen, Author at Andreessen Horowitz | null | Ben Horowitz, Brad Smith, Marc Andreessen, and Satya Nadella |
More About Marc
Marc Andreessen is a cofounder and general partner at the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz. He is an innovator and creator, one of the few to pioneer a software category used by more than a billion people and one of the few to establish multiple billion-dollar companies.
Marc co-created the highly influential Mosaic internet browser and co-founded Netscape, which later sold to AOL for $4.2 billion. He also co-founded Loudcloud, which as Opsware, sold to Hewlett-Packard for $1.6 billion. He later served on the board of Hewlett-Packard from 2008 to 2018.
Marc holds a BS in computer science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Marc serves on the board of the following Andreessen Horowitz portfolio companies: Applied Intuition, Carta, Coinbase, Dialpad, Flow, Golden, Honor, OpenGov, Samsara, Simple Things, and TipTop Labs. He is also on the board of Meta.
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The time has come to stand up for Little Tech. Bad government policies are now the #1 threat to Little Tech. We believe American technology supremacy, and the critical role that Little Tech startups play in ensuring that supremacy, is a first class political issue on par with any other.
In this latest episode on the State of AI, Ben and Marc discuss how small AI startups can compete with Big Tech’s massive compute and data scale advantages, reveal why data is overrated as a sellable asset, and unpack al...
The gaming industry stands as a pioneer of cutting-edge technologies, ushering in innovations like GPUs, virtual and augmented reality, physics engines, and immersive multiplayer experiences.
In this episode, a16z cofounder Marc Andreessen and Andrew Chen, General Partner at a16z Games, dig into why a16z was compelled to establish a dedicated games fund. They explore the origins of tech pessimism, effective engagement with government in tech, its significance for the gaming community, the ongoing AI revolution, and even what Marc himself would build today if he didn't have his hands full.
“If America is going to be America in the next one hundred years, we have to get this right.” - Ben Horowitz
Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz discuss the new bestselling book Read Write Own with author Chris Dixon on the web3 with a16z crypto podcast.
"The Ben & Marc Show" features a16z's co-founders Ben Horowitz & Marc Andreessen. In this episode, Marc and Ben continue their in-depth exploration of the current education system. While Part I of their discussion unpacked the crisis facing higher education, Part II presents solutions to overhaul the modern university.
In this one-on-one conversation, Marc and Ben tackle the university system – what has certainly been a hot topic that’s been dominating the news over the past few months. As Marc states at the top of the episode, universities matter tremendously to our world, but they’re currently in a state of crisis.
Marc and Ben are joined by special guest Tony Robbins to discuss new breakthroughs in regenerative medicine, AI, biohacking, gene editing, mindset and why this might be the best time to be alive.
In an article that has sparked widespread conversation across traditional and social media, Marc challenges the pessimistic narrative surrounding technology today, and instead celebrates it as a liberating force that can lead to growth, progress and abundance for all. In this one-on-one conversation based on YOUR questions from X (formerly Twitter), Ben and Marc discuss how technological advancements can improve the quality of human life, uplift marginalized communities, and even encourage us to answer the bigger questions of the universe.
We are told that technology is on the brink of ruining everything. But we are being lied to, and the truth is so much better. Marc Andreessen presents his techno-optimist vision for the future.
TipTop creates tools that reduce the consumer code of owning products. They offer customers a guaranteed buyback price at the time of purchase, so they only pay for the product while they need it.
This week, a16z’s own cofounder Marc Andreessen published a nearly 7,000-word article that aimed to dispel fears over AI's risks to our humanity – both real and imagined. Instead, Marc elaborates on how AI can "make everything we care about better."
In this timely one-on-one conversation with a16z General Partner Martin Casado, Marc discusses how this technology will maximize human potential, why the future of AI should be decided by the free market, and most importantly, why AI won’t destroy the world. In fact, it may save it.
Read Marc’s full article “Why AI Will Save the World” here: https://a16z.com/2023/06/06/ai-will-save-the-world/
There's a full-blown moral panic about AI right now. But the real risk is losing the race to global AI technological superiority.
Back in August, after a16z announced our investment into Adam Neumann’s new company, Flow, it felt like almost everyone – whether it was other VCs, founders, or journalists – had something to say.
But the one person that you didn’t hear from was Adam himself.
In this never-before shared footage from a16z’s American Dynamism Summit in Washington DC, Adam Neumann sits down with Marc Andreessen and David Ulevitch, to discuss the opportunities that have emerged from post-pandemic shifts in both work and home, and what Flow is doing to capitalize.
In this episode, Marc Andreessen and Vijay Pande discuss expert AI and its role in healthcare, bio, and more.
In this episode, Marc Andresseen and Vijay Pande discuss expert AI and its role in healthcare, bio, and more.
Best Clips of 2022
Steph Smith, Das Rush, Steve Wozniak, Chris Power, Ryan Petersen, Marc Andreessen, Balaji Srinivasan, Karen Cheng, Moriba Jah, Alex Fielding, and Neal Stephenson
We’ve had some incredible guests join us on the a16z podcast this year, ranging from moonshot entrepreneurs, to top creators, to some of the most forward thinking technologists – all of which are busy shaping the future right before our eyes…
We have so much more in store for 2023 and cannot wait for you to see who we bring on as guests. But before we turn the page, we wanted to recap some of the most interesting, thought-provoking segments from our 2022 roster. Here are 8 of our favorite clips, covering topics from AI to space to the metaverse… and beyond.
With much coverage of technology lined with pessimism, the a16z Podcast returns to highlight the bright side of technology, alongside the founders building it. But before featuring the solutions in progress, we wanted to explore why building the future is still so important.
And who better to traverse this ground than a16z’s own cofounder Marc Andreessen, who has built and invested in the future time and time again, especially when it wasn't the obvious thing to do.
Together with Marc, this episode explores technology through the lens of history – including the three stages of human psychology as we encounter new technologies, how that process often manifests in regulation, when to change your mind, the Cambrian explosion of opportunity coming from distributed work, the importance of founder-led companies, and perhaps most importantly, we examine why there's still much reason for optimism.
To celebrate the LA community and the city's growth, a16z recently hosted Time to Build: Los Angeles, an event where we invited LA-based investors, founders, and operators from across a diverse range of industries to tal...
An Internet news outlet is asking a lot of people I know, and some I don’t, what I’ve been up to lately. Lord knows what they’ll ultimately publish, so I thought I’d just write this instead.
In this episode from October 2021, Michael Dell, founder and CEO of Dell Technologies and one of the longest serving founder-CEOs in the technology industry, joins a16z general partner Martin Casado, a16z co-founder Marc Andreessen, and host Sonal Choksi on the occasion of Michael’s book, Play Nice to Win: A CEO’s Journey from Founder to Leader.
There are lots of challenges in being public while trying to innovate, and limits to being a private company as well; but it's rare to see a company go public then private then back to public again. As is the case with Dell Technologies, one of the largest tech companies -- which went private 2012-2013 and then also pulled off one of the most epic mergers of all time with Dell + EMC + VMWare 2015-2016 (and which we wrote about here at the time).
Is there a method to the madness? How does one not just start, but keep, and transform, their company and business? Michael, Marc, Martin and Sonal debate these questions, as well as the impact of the cloud wars, how innovation happens when a company is private and when its public (something Michael knows well, having taken Dell public to private to back to public again), whether you can actually play nice to win as a leader, and more.
Our nation has a housing crisis.
In this episode from October 2019, a16z co-founder Marc Andreessen and former a16z podcast showrunner Sonal Choksi bring on MIT economist and bestselling author Andrew McAfee to discuss why the lessons of human growth in times past, from the Industrial Revolution onwards, might not apply to our future. It used to be that the only way for humanity to grow — and progress — was through destroying the environment. But is this interplay between human growth vs. environment really a zero-sum game? Even if it were true in history, is it true today? If capitalism is not responsible for environmental degradation, than who or what is? And where does (and doesn’t) technology come in?
The conversation is based on McAfee’s 2019 book More from Less: The Surprising Story of How We Learned to Prosper Using Fewer Resources -- and What Happens Next, ranging broadly across many areas of growth, from the future of energy and agriculture to the role of capitalism and technology today and tomorrow, from dematerialization to Tesla, Buckminster Fuller, and more.
These are edited highlights from a recent Clubhouse discussion among Hadrian founder and CEO Chris Power, a16z partners Katherine Boyle and Marc Andreessen, and Not Boring newsletter author Packy McCormick. The dialogue...
Marc Andreessen and Sonal interview author, consultant/advisor, and former pro poker player Annie Duke, in one of her first few appearances with us, and in a conversation quite unlike her other conversations. We cover a broad range of topics relevant to both companies and individuals, all about thinking in bets when it comes to innovation in your business or change in your personal life.
Welcome to 16 Minutes, our show on the a16z podcast network where we talk about tech trends that are dominating news headlines, industry buzz, and where we are on the long arc of innovation. Today’s episode actually features a look back at the GameStop saga — the stock market drama that some headlines described as a “David-and-Goliath battle” that “upended Wall Street.”
It's rare to see a company go public then private then back to public again, as Dell Technologies did -- and which also pulled off one of the most epic mergers of all time with Dell + EMC + VMWare. How does one not just start, but keep -- and transform -- a company and business, especially as it adapts to broader, underlying tech platform shifts like demise of PC, end of cloud, cloud wars, and much more? This is really a story about innovation: who decides, who judges, who does it, and where.
We were at an inflection point with the COVID pandemic, between old and new tech, science institutions, public health policy, more. So what can we learn from the past for the future? Former head of the FDA Dr. Scott Gottlieb (author of the upcoming new book, Uncontrolled Spread) shares stories from behind the scenes, debating probing ethical and policy questions with a16z co-founder Marc Andreessen and a16z bio general partners Vineeta Agarwala MD, Phd and Vijay Pande PhD.
On social audio app Clubhouse, Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz are hosting a new live show called "One on One with A and Z", where they go deep on questions submitted via Twitter. The show is based in part by a newspaper column that Andy Grove did in the 80s, where readers sent in questions for him to answer in his column.
In this mega-episode of the a16z Podcast, we've combined their first two episodes into almost three hours of discussion and debate about some of the most important topics in entrepreneurship, tech, and culture. Each of these episodes also initially aired on our new show, a16z Live, which captures and share many of the live discussions and events featuring, hosted, or co-hosted by a16z partners (with outside voices too) on Clubhouse and beyond.
For more than 100 years, companies have existed in a binary world, either private or public. Private companies have been highly restricted in how they can raise money, sell stock, provide employee liquidity, and otherwis...
Welcome, Sriram Krishnan, our newest general partner, to Andreessen Horowitz!
If software’s eating the world -- and more specifically, bringing costs down and increasing productivity through entire industries -- why have some industries, like healthcare, been so resistant?
How come things like healthcare, education, and housing get more and more expensive, but things like socks, shoes, and electronics all get cheaper and cheaper? In this episode of Bio Eats World, a16z founder and internet...
In this episode of Bio Eats World, a16z founder and internet pioneer Marc Andreessen and general partner Jorge Conde zoom out to discuss the large scale societal effects of the current pandemic on society, healthcare, bi...
Last year, I wrote about our series B investment in Applied Intuition, which builds simulation software and infrastructure tools to safely test and validate autonomous vehicles at scale. Now, just a little over a year la...
A wide-ranging Q&A all about education, from the purpose, past, and present of education; the economics of education (student loans & the debt crisis, government funding, cost disease, accreditation capture); tradeoffs of "hard" and "soft" degrees; and whether or not to drop out and go straight to field or startup. What's the best advice for students and others contemplating change in their careers... how do you get noticed?
This interview was recorded earlier this year and originally appeared on The Observer Effect; it has only been lightly edited for formatting here.
Marc Andreessen reads out loud IT'S TIME TO BUILD
Every Western institution was unprepared for the coronavirus pandemic, despite many prior warnings. This monumental failure of institutional effectiveness will reverberate for the rest of the decade, but it's not too ear...
Gaming has gone from a niche hobby to a massive global industry across all demographics and well beyond outdated, narrow stereotypes of “gamers”. In fact, games are not even just “games” any longer, but a form of enterta...
Many skeptics thought the internet would never reach mass adoption, but today it’s shaping global culture, is integral to our lives -- and it's just the beginning.
In this conversation from our 2019 innovation summit, Kevin Kelly (Founding Executive Editor, WIRED magazine) and Marc Andreessen sit down to discuss the evolution of technology, key trends, and why they're the most optimistic people in the room.
The creator of hit shows like Grey's Anatomy, Scandal, and others, writer and executive producer Shonda Rhimes shares lessons she's learned about pitching ideas, storytelling, leadership, and scaling a business across mediums.
In this special guest hosted episode -- cross-posted from the new show Starting Greatness (featuring interviews with startup builders before they were successful, hosted by Mike Maples jr) -- Marc Andreessen shares some rare, behind-the-scenes details of his story from 0 to 1... from the University of Illinois and Mosaic to Netscape.
Many skeptics thought the internet would never reach mass adoption, but today it’s shaping global culture, is integral to our lives -- and it's just the beginning. In this conversation from our 2019 innovation summit, Ke...
It used to be that the only way for humanity to grow — and progress — was through destroying the environment. But is this interplay between human growth vs. environment really a zero-sum game? Even if it were true in history, is it true today? If capitalism is not responsible for environmental degradation, than who or what is? And where does (and doesn’t) technology come in? @pmarca and @smc90 interview MIT economist @amcafee about all this and more, given his new book, More from Less: The Surprising Story of How We Learned to Prosper Using Fewer Resources — and What Happens Next.
As Steve Blank has documented in his “Secret History of Silicon Valley”, the origin of the American high-technology industry traces back nearly a century to the creation of such critical defense technologies as radar, el...
We at a16z -- and I personally -- are excited to partner with Qasar Younis, Peter Ludwig, and the Applied Intuition team to build the first and most advanced software supplier to the global auto and transportation indust...
What can we learn from the history of the internet for the future of crypto? In this episode of the a16z Podcast, general partner Katie Haun interviews a16z co-founder Marc Andreessen -- and co-founder of Netscape, which...
It's the oldest rule of disruption: People inside the company almost always see the next thing coming, but have a hard time being heard or driving actual change.
Editor’s note: This article is based on an episode of the a16z Podcast, which you can listen to here.
Back in 2011, a16z cofounder Marc Andreessen first made the bold claim that software would eat the world. In this episode (originally recorded as part of an event at a16z), Andreesseen and a16z general partner on the bio...
A lot in technology -- and venture -- happens in decades. New cycles of technology come and go, including some secular shifts; a new generation of founders matures; and so much more changes. So when Andreessen Horowitz (...
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