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rbirkby
2007-04-09T18:20:26
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Sorry to be really anal and pedantic, but you can have more than 1 language in a .Net DLL (assembly). You compile the code for each language to a .Net module, then bind these together with a manifest into a .Net assembly. I told you it was anal.
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ashu
2007-04-09T18:26:21
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wonderfully said!
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richcollins
2007-04-09T18:26:37
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How does seaside help with that? Do you code all of the client logic in Smalltalk instead of Javascript?
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raganwald
2007-04-09T18:29:43
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"What are these people thinking? Why are they going to VCs for venture capital to write social networking sites in Ruby on Rails? <i></i>The whole point of Ruby on Rails is it gives you the ability to write applications without VC funding! That's what it was invented for!<i></i>"
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glah
2007-04-09T18:30:03
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Y Combinator is Dead. Why? Because all the little MeToo Point Oh companies it funded aren't making any money. So Paul Graham writes this article practically daring Microsoft to buy all Web 2.0 companies in the valley, hoping that a couple of his little darlings will also be scooped up. We should all be screaming "shill".
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randallsquared
2007-04-09T18:32:05
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Well, there is that. I spend rather more time gloating about my Macs than I should, I suppose, and much of the gloating is about antivirus suckage for the Windows boxes. :)
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spanky_monkey
2007-04-09T18:33:54
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The poverty of analysis and thought in this essay is best illustrated by the sentence:<p>"There can only be one big man in town, and they're clearly it."<p>I love reading the "Microsoft is dead" stories - there has been about 1 a year for the last 10 years or so. <p>I remember when Netscape was going to rule the world - or AOL. <p>I even recall that people seriously thought that a Palm Pilot would slay the giant. <p>Oh how we laughed!<p>And just because your tiny geek-chic niche all uses Macs doesn't mean that everyone does. <p>Nor does using a Mac make you A) cooler B) smarter C) more attractive to the opposite sex D) more creative or E) qualified to make sweeping generalizations about industries and business you apparently know little about. <p>Other than that, very interesting.
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zach
2007-04-09T18:38:40
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Wow, it may be the first time someone's read my weblog! Good post yourself though, thanks.
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domp
2007-04-09T18:40:34
Starting a startup outside Silicon Valley
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http://outsidethevalley.com/2007/04/09/the-venture-process-when-you%e2%80%99re-outside-the-valley-part-i/
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jkush
2007-04-09T18:41:21
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interesting interview that would have been much more interesting if they'd used typography that made it readable.
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jk
2007-04-09T18:45:40
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Great article. The demo works. What language was used?
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gibsonf1
2007-04-09T18:51:13
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We use Allegro Serve's webactions, though we've customized (bypassed) it to the point where we now only use their session feature.
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fuzzyman
2007-04-09T18:54:17
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How many developers of startups do you know who actually use a browser based IDE ?<p>There are a couple and they only suck a bit, but they don't compare to the desktop ones.<p>I don't use a browser based text editor when I want to make a quick note. Actually a couple of my friends do with google docs - but not too many.<p>For the apps I use everyday, the browser sucks. It's not just latency, although this is a big contributor to why web apps <i>feel</i> sucky and clunky, but the browser just isn't a very good platform for rich applciations.<p>The google integration between their applications is very good, and getting better, but it isn't enough to make me forget that the interface sucks...
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nickb
2007-04-09T18:55:40
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Yeah, make only hits. Make only products that will sell by millions. Only concentrate on winners.<p>"A lot of times, people don't know what they want until you show it to them." ~ Steve Jobs
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ido
2007-04-09T18:56:10
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Why not use a database?
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mauricecheeks
2007-04-09T18:56:39
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Someone who's IQ is reasonably high will still say uninformed things. Also, IQ does not change with age... so a 14 year old with a high IQ would fit right into your "elite community" and immediately spoil the party due to their lack of maturity. <p>Why not just form a blacklist of "stupid IPs". Keep your input productive... or die.
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fuzzyman
2007-04-09T18:57:12
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As an open-source developer (with Python) who uses Windows, Microsoft and their actions hardly ever seemed to feature in the things I was interested in or that were important to me.<p>That actually changed when I got a job developing an application with IronPython (an open-source implementation of Python for .NET - funded by Microsoft).<p>Now I actually use .NET, and I have to admit that it isn't bad. Generally a sane API, and C# is nicer than Java.<p>Still, when I develop my own projects I use cPython, and Microsoft is now 'slightly; relevant whereas for the last few years they have seemed completely irrelevant.
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meyouall
2007-04-09T18:59:58
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PHP
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zaidf
2007-04-09T19:03:05
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From my two years at university, I've had interesting conversations with friends specifically about starting something. <p>Here's the problem: from what people hear in the media, college folks have this idea that START UP = GET-RICH-QUICK. And on that basis, it is not hard to get someone to be your cofounder. Of course, then I explain to them that while this <i>could</i> make us really rich, it also has tremendous risk and that I start start-ups FIRSTLY because it is my passion before anything else. At that point, almost everyone I know just finds it easier to maintain their good GPA instead of risk their GPA and degree for a start-up.<p>A good test I have is asking someone what they would do if they are taking an exam and find out midway through that their high traffic server and website is down.
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papersmith
2007-04-09T19:04:44
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Started out with Ruby on Rails, changed to Python (pylons) + mako + toscawidgets + postgres for more flexibility. Considering giving Common Lisp (Uncommon Web) a try, but the documentation scared the heck out of me.
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kul
2007-04-09T19:05:15
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Go to India
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dawie
2007-04-09T19:07:18
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Drink, Party and start a new Company. Maybe move to a cheap warm country
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mauricecheeks
2007-04-09T19:08:08
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Sure epinions would be a closer comparison to us, because we do allow user reviews. <p>Our approach though, is mostly to let people submit links to outside reviews. There will always be CNet & engadget (and these will be submitted), but what we're hoping for is a place to help people find reliable reviews from lesser known sites like audioholics, i4u, GSM arena, or the hundreds or thousands of tech blogs like digitalconsistency.com that pop up all the time.<p>Forming a user-driven centralized hub for consumer electronic reviews from all over the web.
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irakundji
2007-04-09T19:08:09
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I absolutely agree. I would start another one. Not so much because I want to sell it. I have all these ideas that I have written down and I want to have an opportunity to do them. Because they're your babies and you want to give them ALL life. It's always hardest to decide which one to do now and which ones to pursue later...
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erdos2
2007-04-09T19:09:34
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Here's a detailed link on setting up a scheme server (perhaps more detailed than many system admins would need). I'd err towards mod_lisp under Apache rather than run SISC Scheme under Tomcat, but this is a pleasant read: <a href="http://www.lisperati.com/quick.html">http://www.lisperati.com/quick.html</a>
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mauricecheeks
2007-04-09T19:10:48
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Simply not displaying who rated you up or down (just like on here) is the first step towards that. <p>That is definitely something that has been a consideration since day one though. Epinioins was widely disqualified as a reputable source because people formed such "cartels" to take advantage of their paid review model.
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yaacovtp
2007-04-09T19:11:22
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That was fun. I just started a game with the others there called "kill purple." I wrote that in the chat and then started drawing in purple. Other colors then squashed me.<p>This could end up being top productivity killer. Put the power of perezhilton.com in the hands of the people. Oy!
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Zendor
2007-04-09T19:11:50
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What a small view of the world you have. So, since all you see are macs therefore MS is dead. This also resembles the all I see is linux so MS is dead to. LOL. It's 2007, Why is MS still in business then? MS keeps moving forward. The battle ground is not the os anymore but what you will do with it. I do not see Apple creating there version of .NET and getting the largest amount of developers on board to work with it. Linux has a long way to go before Gradma can use it daily, Many gradmas ARE using MS to blog, share pics and more everyday. And once the other contenders get to that point, it will gradmas PROGRAMMING for windows. So say what you like. You know deep down they can't beat MS, MS will just adapt and create a more compelling reason for the majority to work with them. There is room for everyone. Just a bigger room is needed for Microsoft!
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Harj
2007-04-09T19:14:41
How far to the future should a startup look?
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yaacovtp
2007-04-09T19:14:56
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Best advice I've heard about what to do after selling your company is to first get your first one off the ground. If you want to go to Disneyland copy the <a href="http://www.twiddla.com/">http://www.twiddla.com/</a> guys and sell it a week later on sitepoint. That ought to get you enough for a week in LA.
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Zendor
2007-04-09T19:15:33
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What a small view of the world you have. So, since all you see are macs therefore MS is dead. This also resembles the all I see is linux so MS is dead to. LOL. It's 2007, Why is MS still in business then? MS keeps moving forward. The battle ground is not the os anymore but what you will do with it. I do not see Apple creating there version of .NET and getting the largest amount of developers on board to work with it. Linux has a long way to go before Gradma can use it daily, Many gradmas ARE using MS to blog, share pics and more everyday. And once the other contenders get to that point, it will gradmas PROGRAMMING for windows. So say what you like. You know deep down they can't beat MS, MS will just adapt and create a more compelling reason for the majority to work with them. There is room for everyone. Just a bigger room is needed for Microsoft!
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Harj
2007-04-09T19:16:31
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I'm currently doing a bit of financial planning for our startup - nothing serious just playing with some numbers to see how much money we'd burn if we hired a few more people and how much longer that means we could last for. <p>A question I'm interested in getting opinions on is how much "runway" a startup should typically look at having at any one time. This isn't really something I've personally paid attention to before but I want to give it at least some thought before I move back onto important stuff.<p>Perspectives welcome.
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theoutlander
2007-04-09T19:19:28
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I like .NET Framework..... However, be vigilant about perf!
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theoutlander
2007-04-09T19:20:49
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LISP is cool!! I did it 10 years ago.... but keep confusing it with ML and Prolog.... :-|
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imp
2007-04-09T19:23:44
How to Optimize Rank Data in MySQL
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http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/mysql/2007/03/01/optimize-mysql-rank-data.html
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gibsonf1
2007-04-09T19:24:29
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I hadn't heard of kpax before. Their documentation is missing on their website. Do you know the features and positive reasons to use it?
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TechNoWeb
2007-04-09T19:31:20
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well with Microsoft holding a good 90% of the desktop market and most schools only have classes for Microsoft software i just don't see Microsoft as dead and not anything in the near future <p>this article was well just a bunch of FUD
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nostrademons
2007-04-09T19:37:41
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Isn't this a little premature? I mean, except for PG, dshah, and perhaps a few other lurkers, very few of us have sold (or statistically, are likely to sell) a company.<p>That said, I'd probably work on some of the other ideas I've had. Ones that are arguably more useful and more world-changing, but have little or no revenue potential.
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dhouston
2007-04-09T19:37:55
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if you're thinking of developing a web app in lisp but haven't looked at python or ruby, you might consider them -- remember, it's not just the raw language but also the surrounding infrastructure, and python (django, turbogears) and ruby (rails) have arguably much more developed frameworks, and also arguably have most of the interesting language features that would draw you to lisp in the first place.<p>the point is the language is only one piece of the equation -- you want to be spending your time developing your app, not rolling your own supporting elements (templating systems, init scripts, form validators, sql bindings/mappers, etc.) and of course i'm sure others will point out reddit's switch from lisp to python.
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brlewis
2007-04-09T19:37:57
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Does YC only invest in ventures planning on liquidity events, or are they open to ventures that only plan on becoming profitable and paying dividends?
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dpapathanasiou
2007-04-09T19:39:45
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Here's an overview of different approaches: <a href="http://bc.tech.coop/blog/041017.html">http://bc.tech.coop/blog/041017.html</a><p>And here's a list of different web server resources: <a href="http://www.cl-user.net/asp/tags/web-servers">http://www.cl-user.net/asp/tags/web-servers</a>
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nonrecursive
2007-04-09T19:44:07
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Does anyone else get tired of "What are these people thinking?" comments? Or anyone with an "I have all the answers, everyone else must be crazy or a moron because christ look at what they're doing" attitude?<p>People use Ruby on Rails and still go after VC funding might just do so because <i>they need it</i>.<p>Or maybe not! Maybe they want some sort of prestige, or maybe they're scared, or maybe they just want the experience. Who cares?<p>There is such a loud din on the Internet about the right method to follow, or in this case the right "wheels" and the right "car". Most of these articles do not reference any real supporting research, but instead rely on the author's vague intuition. The author of this article, Giles Bowkett, is talking about people who haven't failed yet - so who's to say if their picking up a serial entrepreneur founder wasn't a wise decision?<p>My computer chair advice: use your own brain. Precisely identify the problems you need to solve and the questions you need to answer.<p>For example, one of my problems is that it's difficult for me to focus on side projects in my spare time while doing client work. To solve this problem I'll need seed funding so that I won't have to do client work while I work on the project I really want to do. Thus, I've applied to ycombinator (and have experienced 7 days of stomach churning apprehension hoping I'll be accepted). This doesn't make me illiterate, nor does it mean I have to go memorize Getting Real. It just means I'm relying on my own judgment.
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irakundji
2007-04-09T19:44:15
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Very true about the first statement. But I asked to see what people's aspirations in life are. If money wasn't an issue and you could have everything you want, what would you do with your time? I often ask myself this so as to know that I am always following my hopes and dreams rather than following money.
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dpapathanasiou
2007-04-09T19:45:18
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This sounds like someone took Gmail Paper -- <a href="http://mail.google.com/mail/help/paper/index.html">http://mail.google.com/mail/help/paper/index.html</a> -- a bit too seriously.
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boris
2007-04-09T19:45:41
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I think it depends at what stage you are. If you are at the beginning then the answer is in the (conservative) estimate of how long it will take you to start getting some real money in. This can be very tricky to get right so be very conservative.<p>If you are already at a stage where you have some cash inflow from sales then I would say 6 months reserves is what you need. If you see that you have more than enough cash in the bank to last you 6 months without any sales then I would say expand.
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papersmith
2007-04-09T19:47:55
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Did you guys buy the Allegro suite or are you using portable allegroserve?
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brett
2007-04-09T19:48:35
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I think it's an interesting point, but using Rails doesn't mean you have to structure your business like 37 Signals. I <i>did</i> read Getting Real, but with a grain or two of salt. It had some really good points, but understanding their point and trying to emulate their business structure (as they suggest you should) are different things. <p>Busting your ass and forming a company with a larger growth potential is still an option. It makes things riskier, but some people are fine with that. <p>The point of this really should have been that you need to be cognizant of the type company you are creating, realistic about its chances for success and aware that VC funding is only a means to an end.
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gibsonf1
2007-04-09T19:50:34
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Why did you decide to go with Scheme as opposed to Lisp? (I'm very curious about the pros and cons)
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brett
2007-04-09T19:52:22
Paul Graham speaking at Stanford on Wednesday (4/11/07 - 5:30PM)
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http://ases.stanford.edu/summit_2007_graham.shtml
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brett
2007-04-09T19:53:38
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their RSVP page: <a href="http://ases.stanford.edu/speaker_eventrsvp.shtml">http://ases.stanford.edu/speaker_eventrsvp.shtml</a>
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brlewis
2007-04-09T19:54:22
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Sorry, I spent years demonstrating to people how Lisp is better for everybody doing web development, not just elite programmers. I'm done. My new philosophy is, if you can't get them to join you, beat them.<p>Now I'm at a point where my venture absolutely must succeed. I'll take every advantage I can get.
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papersmith
2007-04-09T19:54:53
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I would love to see more Lisp web apps in startups. It's been quite discouraging after reddit abandoned Lisp.
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jkush
2007-04-09T19:58:38
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There's also this resource which is very much for beginners but if you're just starting to find out all about using Lisp to do web development this might be a good read:<p><a href="http://www.gigamonkeys.com/book/practical-web-programming-with-allegroserve.html">http://www.gigamonkeys.com/book/practical-web-programming-with-allegroserve.html</a>
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gibsonf1
2007-04-09T20:01:57
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We actually bought Lispworks (half the price of Allegro), and are using portable allegroserve. My partner (who is a software architect by trade) learned lisp for our current start-up and is using slime on Emacs for his interface so we can switch to Allegro if we want later on, which we are considering for their native high-speed mysql interface assuming it performs as advertised - we're using ClSQL right now to talk to MySQL.)<p>He is extremely happy about lisp, especially after hacking java for years. (The code-base I had built up over the last few years as well as PG's writings helped convince him to give it a try even though he was very skeptical about lisp at first, There is no going back now :) <p>Ironically, we decided on a different (more focused) idea to pursue for the current startup for which my architectural firm is the current first customer (my hair was on fire for this app), so the initial code base is waiting for a later date. (It will be used to extend the feature set of the current app by adding a conceptual interface)<p>My partner is concerned about Aserve's ability to handle massive numbers of sessions at the same time, so we are considering going to a java websever and using the lisp side to generate all the html. (The html macro in Aserve is proving very fast and reliable) We're definitely looking for the best solution out there right now as we are planning to go live in about 2 months.
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jkush
2007-04-09T20:02:05
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Please pardon how newbieish this article starts out. I don't mean to insinuate that you're at this level - I was just dropping a link that may or not may be of use to you.
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ivan
2007-04-09T20:05:01
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There is no VC in 37sig? I think it is.
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mukund
2007-04-09T20:06:28
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But still people can open multiple accounts or ask their friends to log in and hike up the karma? They can manipulate the reviews and swing it in their favour
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vikram
2007-04-09T20:07:26
null
I'd use a continuation based framework to get started. Seaside for smalltalk, plt-scheme or UCW in lisp. I've been using UCW to develop my project. It makes it really easy to think about the problem. You serve a page, the page has actions (method calls) which take parameters. The parameters are fields on the page. It's really easy to think about an application. It lets you prototype in code.<p>For our stuff, I started with rails, just found it too hard to get started. I had to decide what the tables looked like, how I was going to divide the data, write a model for every table then connect it to a page. <p>With UCW, I write code which connects to a function call. Simple.<p>
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10,875
10,875
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10,958
comment
vikram
2007-04-09T20:08:10
null
Most people say that you shouldn't use lisp because it doesn't have libraries. Well they are only half right. You shouldn't use lisp, because most lisp libraries have very little documentation. Lisp has a lot of libraries. You have to be willing to read code (i.e. examples/tests) to figure out how to use them.<p><a href="http://www.cliki.net/Library">http://www.cliki.net/Library</a><p>Assuming that the most precious commodity is development time. I'd say rails/django don't even come close to UCW in getting stuff done.
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10,938
10,875
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[ 11150 ]
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comment
Tichy
2007-04-09T20:11:17
null
Too ugly.
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10,731
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10,960
comment
vikram
2007-04-09T20:15:11
null
I think there is potential in Web OS. But they can't be a defacto replacement of the desktop interface. I think the wufoo approach is better than say the youos approach.
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10,781
10,781
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10,961
comment
theManMyth
2007-04-09T20:18:02
null
If this article was renamed, "Microsoft Potentially Faces New Challenges and more Intense Competition in the Upcoming Future," then, sure. But "Microsoft is Dead?" Give me a break. How can the most profitable and recognized software company on the planet be "dead?" <p>Could it be stagnant? Yeah; I suppose. Maybe it is stagnant. Or maybe you're just so caught up in your "hip" counter-culture $2,000 iMac lifestyle that you are blinded to the plain facts. The facts, like, that 99% of businesses and developers EXCLUSIVELY use Windows. And 99% of all homes. And 90% of all students. I don't understand how any company with around 90% of the entire marketshare could be considered dead.<p>You made some good points but ultimately this whole "essay," is just off-base hogwash for Apple fanboys.
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9,770
9,770
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10,962
comment
ivan
2007-04-09T20:18:23
null
Some people are lazy, exploit others good will and have luck, they sold their company and other people are agile and doesn't have luck. If you was lazy before, you stay lazy, and buy dream house, car or whatever ... if you are agile, you start a new company.
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10,850
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10,963
comment
nadeem
2007-04-09T20:19:14
null
I actually thought it was an excellent piece. I don't necessarily think that Microsoft is down and out for the count but equal they do seem to be playing catchup a lot.<p>It was a great little piece Paul.<p> <a href="http://www.virtualchaos.co.uk/blog/2007/04/08/microsoft-is-dead/">http://www.virtualchaos.co.uk/blog/2007/04/08/microsoft-is-dead/</a>
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10,964
story
amichail
2007-04-09T20:25:28
justin.tv as a way to augment your mind with the intelligence and knowledge of your viewers
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1
null
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3
[ 10965 ]
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10,965
comment
amichail
2007-04-09T20:26:30
null
Imagine using justin.tv to augment your mind, taking advantage of the intelligence and knowledge of your viewers.<p>For example, in a difficult social/business situation, you would get instant recommendations about what to do via an ear piece from your viewers.<p>You could also expand your sensory perception by having cameras and microphones pointed in all directions. Again, your viewers would pick up things that would be worthy of your attention.<p>
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10,964
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[ 10966 ]
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10,966
comment
veritas
2007-04-09T20:31:55
null
How would you filter everything out? That's a lot of white noise to process efficiently and quickly. Can't see it being a great deal of help during a social/business situation... unless you're going to pause awkwardly for 5 mins while you sort through all the suggestions. Same thing for extending the senses.
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10,964
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[ 10968 ]
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10,967
story
chandrab
2007-04-09T20:32:04
From Google (Norvig): How to write a spelling check in 20 lines (very cool)
null
http://www.norvig.com/spell-correct.html
46
null
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4
[ 11020, 11116, 12142, 11096 ]
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comment
amichail
2007-04-09T20:35:08
null
You could use something like reddit to do the filtering.<p>You probably don't need to pause for five minutes because most social/business situations last quite a bit longer than that. You could probably say something later.
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10,966
10,964
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10,969
comment
fahree
2007-04-09T20:35:43
null
It's scheme, not CL, but don't forget HOP <a href="http://hop.inria.fr/">http://hop.inria.fr/</a> and whatever the PLT people have in store <a href="http://www.plt-scheme.org/">http://www.plt-scheme.org/</a>
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10,875
10,875
null
[ 11225 ]
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10,970
comment
mukund
2007-04-09T20:36:00
null
YC is clear in its approach. It says helping idea materialize and also says that its not a charity type org.
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10,939
10,767
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10,971
comment
papersmith
2007-04-09T20:38:15
null
I'm fairly new to Lisp, this is encouraging to hear! :) Just a few technical questions:<p>Is there any specific reason to use Lispworks as oppose to a free implementation (say SBCL)? <p>I remember the author of portable allegroserve mentioned that he wrote it mostly for demonstration purposes, and might not perform well. Are you guys finding this to be an issue at this stage?<p>As for session, would it be possible to store session objects in AllegroCache, which comes with the paid version of AllegroCL? (I'm just a newbie speculating :) )
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comment
ivan
2007-04-09T20:38:57
null
"Missed opportunity costs" said Sergey :)
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10,895
10,895
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10,973
comment
skeeterbug
2007-04-09T20:40:52
null
FACT: Your second fact is actually an opinion.
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null
10,578
9,770
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null
null
null
10,974
story
kevinxray
2007-04-09T20:50:02
Is Your Business Healthy?
null
http://www.collaborati.org/kevins/weblog/18.html
1
null
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0
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story
usablecontent
2007-04-09T21:15:15
Atten.TV Lets You BroadCast Your Clickstream
null
http://startupmeme.com/2007/04/09/attentv-lets-you-broadcast-your-clickstream/
1
null
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0
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story
usablecontent
2007-04-09T21:16:04
Hitchsters: Share a Taxi, Save Some Bucks
null
http://startupmeme.com/2007/04/09/hitchsters-share-a-taxi-save-some-bucks/
1
null
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2
[ 11006 ]
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story
Elfan
2007-04-09T21:16:21
Concurrent Startup Idea Generation and the Pervasive Copycat Fallacy
null
http://www.genuinevc.com/archives/2007/04/concurrent_star.htm
1
null
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10,978
story
zaidf
2007-04-09T21:16:29
Remember, "Karma" is for techies!
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2
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6
[ 10979, 10991, 11149 ]
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10,979
comment
zaidf
2007-04-09T21:22:27
null
The word karma has evolved and taken a meaning of its own thanks to slashdot's use of it as a point unit. <p>But I have to say: I consider myself pretty good with computers and even program here and there. Yet, for the longest time I was confused about what exactly "karma" stood for. I knew it was a measurement of some sort(hey what else can a number be?) but I'd no idea about what exactly having "more karma" means.<p>My point is that when you use such phrases, you are assuming a specific kind of audience. Use of karma for reddit(tech-focused) is fine; even for news.yc it's fine - but for a consumer website, you should be very careful about introduction of new words. And say you love the word karma so much that you insist on using it - in that case, have a page that clearly explains what karma is assuming that the user knows nothing about it.<p>Karma is just one example - larger point here is to be careful about use of individual words that may have a huge role to play in your website. Thing that triggered me to make this post is I saw another poster use "karma" on their consumer start-up(bad idea IMO). <p>This is a mistake that is so easy to commit. Heck we did it when we launched. A lot of our users that were playing songs on our site had no idea what "Jigg It!" button meant. After couple user mails inquiring about it, we put up a tooltip saying "Jigg It if you like it!". Suddenly more people were clicking on it. <p>--Zaid
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[ 11175 ]
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story
Elfan
2007-04-09T21:23:54
Elements of Design: A Web Design Showcase
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http://www.smileycat.com/design_elements/
2
null
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null
null
null
10,981
comment
ido
2007-04-09T21:40:09
null
Scheme is a dialect of Lisp.
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10,947
10,875
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[ 10993 ]
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10,982
comment
shsung
2007-04-09T21:40:19
null
I don't think price is necessarily a great indicator of quality - at the very largest firms, I'd say that most of the high price is because they're offsetting the cost of training their newly minted lawyers on you. Three years of law school in the US really doesn't teach you a whole lot - you learn everything on the job. You're basically paying for a law firm's reputation sometimes.<p>He's right, though - the best gauge for quality of service is experience. Get a lawyer with lots of experience in your area, or at least work with a boutique firm that specializes in your field. They will be expensive. Ask around first - other companies have a firm they work with, or in-house lawyers who can recommend a firm. Don't go with an asshole bigshot just because he has the experience - you're in the long haul with your lawyers, so make it pleasant as possible. Never forget that law is primarily a service industry, and he should be listening to you as well as offering advice. <p>The other side of the coin is this: don't hide anything from your lawyer. He can't save you from the pit you dug yourself if you don't tell him about it. You'll save yourself a lot in fees, believe me.
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10,882
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10,983
comment
timg
2007-04-09T21:43:47
null
python, webpy, binding in code from just about every other language.
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10,748
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10,984
comment
timg
2007-04-09T21:47:09
null
This is a great idea from a publicity standpoint. Journalists will eat it up.<p>I will definitely throw this in for one of my upcoming sites.. Are you thinking of building an entire site around it?<p>edit: see how all of the negative publicity really positively helped hotenough.org recently.
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10,771
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story
usablecontent
2007-04-09T21:49:38
JobThread Launches EasyPost, Targets Niche Job Boards
null
http://startupmeme.com/2007/04/09/jobthread-launches-easypost-targets-niche-job-boards/
1
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10,985
0
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comment
timg
2007-04-09T21:50:32
null
Make people always be required to be in the top 50% of members:) Sounds like an engaging competition to me.
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10,771
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comment
timg
2007-04-09T21:52:14
null
For some reason I burst out laughing when I read the headline...<p>I predict that this site will do decently one way or another, though.
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10,810
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comment
papersmith
2007-04-09T21:53:09
null
I guess seaside's continuation passing style helps to reduce complexity in managing states, which is a major requirement in desktop-like apps.
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10,902
10,748
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10,989
comment
papersmith
2007-04-09T22:10:10
null
I think if you're alone and selling a non-mission-critical product directly to consumers, using "I" makes you sound more genuine and not out to take advantage of them. If you add a partner you could just do a regex replace.
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story
domp
2007-04-09T22:10:31
Last.fm rolls out a $3/month subscription service
null
http://mashable.com/2007/04/09/lastfm-subscriptions/
2
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2
[ 11055 ]
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comment
mukund
2007-04-09T22:19:05
null
Actual Karma is defined as "The total effect of a person's actions and conduct during the successive phases of the person's existence, regarded as determining the person's destiny.". In hinduism there is this concept which says that whatever a person does is recorded and sum total will reflect in your next life.
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[ 11022, 11010 ]
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comment
papersmith
2007-04-09T22:26:39
null
I agree that HTML+javascript has serious limitations. But eventually GUI complexity can be managed through good APIs (XUL, flex), and high-bandwidth apps can be delivered through plugins that use lower-level protocols (flash). The current state of these technologies still seem less-than-optimal, but I can see a lot of effort being put into making things more transparent and efficient.
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10,781
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comment
gibsonf1
2007-04-09T22:29:02
null
I know - what benefits do you get from Scheme over CL?
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10,875
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[ 11151 ]
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10,994
comment
danielha
2007-04-09T22:36:05
null
Python.
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null
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comment
jamiequint
2007-04-09T22:37:42
null
server is up!
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10,517
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10,996
story
usablecontent
2007-04-09T22:44:45
Unype Is Multiuser Google Earth With Skype
null
http://startupmeme.com/2007/04/09/unype-is-multiuser-google-earth-with-skype/
1
null
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0
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10,997
comment
pg
2007-04-09T22:45:45
null
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10,875
10,875
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null
null
true
10,998
comment
peirce
2007-04-09T22:50:08
null
"And I'm like, well, how about a reasonable amount of money to work a reasonable amount of the time? And they're like, no. And then I was like, well, how about a tiny amount of money to work hardly ever? And they're like, no."<p>Alas, salary is rarely a linear function of the hours you work.
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comment
philc
2007-04-09T22:51:53
null
Rails + Mysql<p>My webapps are requiring a lot of client side logic to be really interactive, so I've found that the biggest producivity factor is what I'm doing with Javascript. The Rails code I've been writing is mostly trivial; as long as it lets me talk to the database easily, I feel like any language could be used on the backend. However, I do love scripting in Ruby, and Rails makes it easy to use its DB abstractions in external scripts.<p>The best gains on the client-side come from using a good library. I've gone from Prototype/scriptaculous to YUI-ext to Mootools. I love Mootools. I've never been able to bring myself to try Dojo; it seems like it's trying to put the Java back into Javascript. What do you think?
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