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noisemaker
2007-04-19T18:17:21
Y Combinator's winter class
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http://www.siliconvalley.com/venturecapital/ci_5657754?nclick_check=1
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[ 14704, 14702 ]
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jamongkad
2007-04-19T18:18:00
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I second the thought on getting Agile Web Development with Rails. Best damn book I've ever bought concerning Rails. It is true that there is code specific for Rails(which kinda peeves me from my comfortable Ruby shell) but I highly recommend you learn Ruby first just to get the feel of programming in it. I must say coming from Java(ugh) programming is Ruby is such a pleasure. As long as you can think idiomatically then you're pretty much set!
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zaidf
2007-04-19T18:21:20
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Can someone paste the article--or excerpts from it? Login required.
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zaidf
2007-04-19T18:25:12
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I'll be in SFO Friday eve-Sat. eve. All depends on what time the meetup's at. Best for me would be afternoon Sat.
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yaacovtp
2007-04-19T18:25:17
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It's the same thing that was posted here last week, just a list of names of the companies and a one sentence description.<p>If you go to the homepage and search for "combinator" the article will come up and you don't have to register.
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gibsonf1
2007-04-19T18:31:39
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This is probably a dumb question (I checked out Gmail yesterday): Is there a way to import outlook email into Gmail? (I have several gigs)
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juwo
2007-04-19T18:32:01
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Zaid,<p>Thanks for replying. <p>1. What is the problem? 2. Who is it a problem for?...<p>is a very basic exercise. In fact it is on the first slide of my investor presentation. I have thought through this in depth.<p>I will feel comfortable discussing one aspect of it on this board.<p>1) "I cant skip to the important parts when viewing AV" 2) Both publishers and consumers.<p>thanks, Anil
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grahamr
2007-04-19T18:33:23
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Use this tutorial from oreilly/onlamp instead:<p><a href="http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/onlamp/2006/12/14/revisiting-ruby-on-rails-revisited.html">http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/onlamp/2006/12/14/revisiting-ruby-on-rails-revisited.html</a><p>It's nearly 2 years more recent and up-to-date with Rails changes.
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dhouston
2007-04-19T18:36:19
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barcamps (at least in boston) bring together pretty much exactly the people you're looking for, and the group is fairly diverse (young, old, hardcore hackers, serial entrepreneurs, more "corporate" developers, a couple investors/service providers, etc.)
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dhouston
2007-04-19T18:37:20
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memcached (google it) implements this idea (giant in-memory hash table), and scales to multiple machines. used by facebook and lots of other very high volume sites.<p>it's often also used as an LRU cache on top of a normal database so that you can still get the benefits of persistence and rich queries but use memcached to lower the number of hits to the disk/DB.
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zaidf
2007-04-19T18:37:27
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Too vague on #2.You're getting somewhere in #1 by defining specific user use--just make sure it is ACTUALLY a sizable problem for the mass(not just you).<p>Best of luck with your presentation.
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juwo
2007-04-19T18:38:11
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"(2) How do I get it? (Or get access) "<p>Thanks for your feedback! I have added a line at the top.<p>Note: When you click on a demo, NP will automatically download and install. NP can be run both offline and also connected to the internet. (see Technical Requirements)
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jkush
2007-04-19T18:39:44
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Yep. No matter how you phrase it, there are people out there who will never see how that might be true. I've said before that using the file system or caching data in memory isn't an anti-database technique, it's simply a solution to a specific problem. It won't matter though - someone will have a fundamental issue with the approach, no matter how you present it. That's life.
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juwo
2007-04-19T18:42:14
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I dont have any presentation scheduled - but you do! (best wishes with it at YC).<p>publisher: ABC, BBC, CNN, youtube etc...<p>consumer: you, me, joe, jane, hari, harry. <p> By "powerful", I am talking about how it can ease problems first, and scale second.
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zaidf
2007-04-19T18:46:40
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But you haven't convinced me I have a problem--let alone Juwo can solve it. It could be that I'm not the primary audience which is why I asked you to define it AS specific as you can. You're still swimming in vagueness friend...
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[ 14832, 14727 ]
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kogir
2007-04-19T18:47:16
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Perhaps this makes me just a programmer, and not a 'hacker', but I for one can write SQL queries and design a good DB schema in far less time than I could create something similar in RAM myself.
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pg
2007-04-19T18:49:28
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Isn't everyone...
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edgeztv
2007-04-19T18:50:08
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As soon as you introduce an SQL layer to your app, your complexity goes to a higher order of magnitude, making it that much harder to debug and troubleshoot.
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[ 14734, 14718 ]
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edgeztv
2007-04-19T18:51:00
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forgot to mention test and deploy
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story
zaidf
2007-04-19T18:52:05
Overnight success
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http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2007/04/overnight_succe.html
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[ 14820, 14819, 14731 ]
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usablecontent
2007-04-19T18:53:29
Experian Acquires HitWise for $240 Million
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http://startupmeme.com/2007/04/19/experian-acquires-hitwise-for-240-million/
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14,720
1
[ 14723 ]
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juwo
2007-04-19T18:53:53
null
Very strange. I clicked your link and it took me correctly.<p>Anyway, I look forward to your feedback - if you can please use it.
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juwo
2007-04-19T18:56:10
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I am thinking of doing a screencast for each of the demos and putting it by the demo.
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zaidf
2007-04-19T18:58:17
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wow! 240m is big.
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veritas
2007-04-19T18:58:24
null
I've been using rails a bit over the past month, month and half and just now getting a little comfortable with it. I still slightly prefer PHP because even though it comes out ugly and takes more work, I atleast know what every single line of code is doing. Rails has a lot of "magic" which makes things easier but at the same time hides a lot of things from a developer.
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jaggederest
2007-04-19T18:59:14
null
Well, there's the tao of minimal effort for maximal gain, and there's the tao of 'never do any hard work because it is always bad'<p>that is, one is a minimax problem, and the other is a complete prohibition on effort with no regard to reward :P<p>Sometimes, there are hard problems that, when solved, give great rewards. Ala google's pagerank.
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jaggederest
2007-04-19T18:59:58
null
Yeah, prevayler is handicapped by the fact that it's java. Happs is really cool, haven't worked with prevayler, but it's cited as an influence.
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juwo
2007-04-19T19:00:37
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true
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damien
2007-04-19T19:13:30
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Not to mention that this has a 480x640 screen and the iPhone uses 320x480.
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danw
2007-04-19T19:13:52
Business Cards: Do you have them and what do you put on them?
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[ 14735, 14751, 14746, 14741, 14797 ]
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RyanGWU82
2007-04-19T19:14:45
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Excuse me? MySpace puts up a news aggregator and the top story is "Fishing for Fellatio"?<p>I guess I shouldn't be surprised.
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yaacovtp
2007-04-19T19:17:29
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So much for market research. Didn't someone here say release early, test, and improve? There goes a handful of millions.
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mattculbreth
2007-04-19T19:21:35
null
I don't think so. Basically the idea is just to use whatever data structures you were already using (lists, arrays, hash tables, etc.) and just keep them around. Since you already have this in your code, you avoid doing anything with a DB. There are tools in a variety of languages and frameworks to help with the persistence aspects. <p>I don't see how that could take more time than doing both the normal program data structures and the DB.
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falsestprophet
2007-04-19T19:22:52
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Finally! Digg for even stupider people!
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watfiv
2007-04-19T19:23:39
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That's hardly true in all cases. Depending on the situation, the "layer of complexity" introduced by your having to build your own data structures is often far worse than whatever is introduced by using an sql database. If you're using a good ORM, it might not really be "complex" at all.<p>I don't mean this to argue that a db is always good, but I'd guess one of the reasons that people use a database even when it's inappropriate is precisely because it seems less complex.
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danw
2007-04-19T19:26:26
null
I've been wondering if I should make some new business cards but there are so many possibilities.<p><i>1) What job title?</i> Standard titles such as 'developer' or 'designer' may be too restrictive for the likes of us. If you've got a startup should you be CEO, Founder, Director etc? If you freelance or do a variety of jobs what do you put?<p><i>2) What contact information?</i> Which contact information do you give? URL, email, mobile number, etc?<p><i>3) Design</i> Are Moo cards acceptable? Can you print your own or should you go for high end thick card with spot gloss finish? Should you put a custom design on the back or leave it blank?<p>Heres some interesting ideas I've seen on cards recently: Tag cloud and blank fields. Put a tag cloud of all your abilities on the back of the card such as "ruby on rails" or "entrepeneur" and circle the relevant ones when you give your card away. Another card I've seen has blank fields eg "You met Dan W at ______ and talked about _____. You though he was ____" that can be filled in when handing it over.<p>So what are your business cards like? Do you even need any?
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mynameishere
2007-04-19T19:27:19
null
_molded to fit the problem_<p>Most problems I've worked on had to take scaling, concurrency, searching/lookup, report generation (joining), etc, into account...all of which a dbms gives you out of the box. Maybe we're dealing with _very_ different kinds of problems.
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abstractbill
2007-04-19T19:35:08
null
Funny - I'm exactly the opposite. Making something in memory can be as simple as creating a bunch of objects and stashing them in lists, vectors, hash-tables, etc. Retrieval is just traversing those lists, vectors or hash-tables. Whenever I use sql I find myself guessing at the correct almost-human syntax and getting it wrong. Keeping it all in lisp means I don't have to switch languages constantly while developing.<p>One of my spare-time projects, lispdoc.com, uses an in-memory approach (although to be fair it is only indexing a few hundred MB of static data, so it's no effort to keep it all in memory on a single box).
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martin
2007-04-19T19:36:25
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"Ruby for Rails" by David A. Black is a good choice if you're new to Ruby as well as Rails. It spends a lot of time on Ruby fundamentals and only brings in the Rails stuff after having explained the necessary bits of the language so that it actually makes sense. I read the Agile book first, and as a Ruby newbie, it gave me only a very vague understanding of the language. R4R did a much better job of that.
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jsjenkins168
2007-04-19T19:39:40
null
If you need to store to disk at all, use a DB. The exceptions being if you have very small amounts of data or it is not a big deal if its lost (like user preferences or similar). You could just serialize those to flat files.<p>DBMS are optimized for the fastest possible disk I/O. At their very nature they are also designed with data integrity in mind. It would be a joke not to use one if you are handling important data where persistence is even remotely a factor.<p>As you grow you'll be glad you implemented the DB code as it will scale much better. You'll also be able to do Analysis easier which can be very important in learning about usage of your product.<p>But I'm definitely a fan of utilizing ram as much as is allowed in the interest of speed. Try to strike a good balance between data integrity and performance...
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brlewis
2007-04-19T19:40:59
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If I understand your question you're wondering how to deal with older flat files when your app expects a newer data structure.<p>If you're using s-exprs make your structure a list where the first element is a version identifier. If you aren't using s-exprs then use some other extensible format like XML.
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rms
2007-04-19T19:42:24
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I settle for nothing but the best. Metal business cards, about $5 each. I like to make an impression.<p><a href="http://www.luckow.com/clients/woz/colbert.html">http://www.luckow.com/clients/woz/colbert.html</a>
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danw
2007-04-19T19:42:49
You Might be a Web Worker if...
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http://webworkerdaily.com/2007/04/16/you-might-be-a-web-worker-if/
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rjb
2007-04-19T19:43:55
null
I have to second this. "Ruby for Rails", I feel, is a great resource for learning not only the Ruby language, but how to program with it. It really did not need the Rails section. I've only flipped through "Beginning Ruby" (apress), but that looks like a good Ruby book too.
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danw
2007-04-19T19:44:10
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Nice. Apparently Woz has been using these for years.
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story
mattjaynes
2007-04-19T19:45:05
Henrik Fisker: A three-part interview with a master car designer - (37signals)
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http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/385-henrik-fisker-a-three-part-interview-with-a-master-car-designer
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nickb
2007-04-19T19:47:42
null
Quite honestly, I don't care what people's biz cards look like. All I care about is the information on them. I transfer that into into Address Book and throw away/lose the card.<p>Worry more about the impression you leave when you meet those people and less about superficial stuff like biz card stock and font.
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veritas
2007-04-19T19:48:36
ImageKind Scores Partnership With Flickr
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http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/04/19/imagekind-scores-partnership-with-flickr/
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npk
2007-04-19T19:49:34
null
It's a platitude. The full quotation and context is here: <a href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/items/2005/10/17.html">http://www.joelonsoftware.com/items/2005/10/17.html</a><p>I read the "very senior Microsoft developer"'s point as something like: because if statements are so fundamental, most lowly MS programmers think in terms of them. Google, hires programmers who've taken a course in machine learning or something, and use statistical inference (a bunch of if statements, just with some abstraction) instead of lookup tables (a bunch of if statements.)<p>Yawn. This is just Google PR speak. The quotation doesn't really mean if statements will go away, it just means that you need to think at a "higher level." This is just someone saying "X is smarter than Y."<p>
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jasonyan
2007-04-19T19:49:59
null
The nice thing about these web frameworks is that it makes rapid prototyping easy, and in doing so, it does things which may seem "magical". I would recommend that one should gain a certain level of understanding of what's going on behind the scenes. In doing so, it won't be as "magical" after all.
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Tichy
2007-04-19T19:50:34
null
I hope this is not totally embarrassing, but with the file system I am always afraid of losing data. What if something happens to the server at the very moment you change the file? It seems to me the only solution is to keep two files and change them alternately, like the double buffering for graphics, and that would probably be slow.<p>How do you file-advocates solve that problem?<p>What would you use for firefox extensions? I suppose I can't connect to a database with Javascript.
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yaacovtp
2007-04-19T19:53:26
null
Great success with plain old cards from vistaprint.com. Use a simple design with easy to read type. Do you already have a company name? Put that on there, your name, phone, email, only put a web address if it's something potential contacts need to see like your company website not a personal blog. Doesn't something generic like "web developer" work along with a list of your language skills if you are freelancer?
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benhoyt
2007-04-19T19:54:02
null
What about using Google Desktop to index your email? I use Gmail (brilliant search) but still download my email into Thunderbird every so often for a backup. Then Google Desktop indexes my Thunderbird mail nicely, and I can find it just by "hitting" Ctrl twice.<p>gibsonf1, as for importing Outlook email, Gmail can't do it directly, but here's a tool: <a href="http://www.marklyon.org/gmail/.">http://www.marklyon.org/gmail/.</a> Not sure I'd recommend importing "several gigs" though -- Gmail allows up to 2.8GB. I'd probably just switch but keep Outlook and index your old mail with Google Desktop. Gmail is brilliant (as long as you have broadband).
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aston
2007-04-19T19:56:46
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As of FF2, you can use the built in SQLite database for your Firefox extensions. And yes, it's accessible from Javascript. The interface is a lot like JDBC.
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npk
2007-04-19T19:57:57
null
Ok, here's the obvious follow-up question:<p>What DB does news.YC use?
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yaacovtp
2007-04-19T20:02:58
Google Earnings Are Out
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http://investor.google.com/releases/2007Q1.html
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[ 14759, 14899 ]
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story
Tichy
2007-04-19T20:03:06
Really cool business card designs (design studies, really)
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http://www.ideo.com/identity/haircard.htm
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[ 14775, 14757 ]
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Tichy
2007-04-19T20:04:05
null
Click on the little thumbnails above to see all the cards. My favorite is the one with the integrated blood sampler.
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dawie
2007-04-19T20:04:33
Mobispine.com - Free Mobile Feed Browser
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http://franticindustries.com/blog/2007/04/19/mobispinecom-free-mobile-feed-browser/
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yaacovtp
2007-04-19T20:04:43
null
If they didn't have search, they'd be in trouble. Looks like the competition is heating up for space on publishers' sites.<p> Google Sites Revenues - Google-owned sites generated revenues of $1.98 billion, or 62% of total revenues, in the fourth quarter of 2006. This represents an 80% increase over fourth quarter 2005 revenues of $1.10 billion and a 22% increase over third quarter 2006 revenues of $1.63 billion.<p>Google Network Revenues - Google's partner sites generated revenues, through AdSense programs, of $1.20 billion, or 37% of total revenues, in the fourth quarter of 2006. This is a 50% increase over network revenues of $799 million generated in the fourth quarter of 2005 and a 16% increase over third quarter 2006 revenues of $1.04 billion.
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Tichy
2007-04-19T20:09:12
null
I just submitted my favorite web site on business cards here: <a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=14756">http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=14756</a><p>It's more an art project, though.<p>I felt they deserved their own submission - actually the studies are quite old, I think, but your post made me search and find them again.
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Tichy
2007-04-19T20:12:03
null
By the way you formulated that question it seems obvious that you don't want him?
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ecuzzillo
2007-04-19T20:12:42
null
I'd rather have a room full of really smart people with the same values and the same thinking than risk hiring even a quarter of a room of people who are just a little behind.
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edgeztv
2007-04-19T20:16:56
null
Aren't strongly & statically typed languages an evolutionary improvement over dynamic & loosely typed languages that let you shoot yourself in the foot all the time? <p>A Java IDE in a sense "knows" what you're writing and helps you avoid making mistakes while you're coding. <p>People complain about too much boilerplate code in java - that's true, but it can actually be a good thing in the same way comments can be a good thing, and IDEs generate all the boilerplate for you with just a couple of keystrokes (whereas comments don't write themselves).<p>I'm curious whether the Java bashers out there have ever used a good IDE like Eclipse or IDEA for any extended period of time. Because if you're using a text editor like emacs, programming in Java can seem ridiculously difficult. Conversely it might seem ridiculously difficult for a person accustomed to an IDE to use a text editor for a scripting language.<p>Coding Java without an IDE is like trying to control the space shuttle with a steering wheel. Once you've mastered all the features of an IDE, however, (which can take years, but then again so does learning emacs) programming in Java becomes a breeze and you get all the benefits of static typing (with the safety and tools it enables) and the vast Java libraries with no extra difficulty coding compared to a simpler language.
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edgeztv
2007-04-19T20:20:20
null
The only thing I wish Java had is closures, but they are actually under consideration for a future Java release!<p>Right now you can get similar behavior with anonymous inner classes, but it leads to more clutter than necessary.<p>This demonstrates another good argument in favor of java - it is always evolving to make programming in it more enjoyable. It was difficult to use collection classes at first, but version 1.5 introduced generics. It sucked to use the iterator pattern with collections, but now java has a "for each" loop. It sucked not having enums, but now Java has them too, etc. Not to mention that every new Java release brings a ton of new library classes and enhancements.
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story
__
2007-04-19T20:23:07
Linden open-sourcing Second Life "backend" (Mitch Kapor gets his wish?)
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http://blogs.zdnet.com/social/?p=142
4
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0
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comment
far33d
2007-04-19T20:28:14
null
A room full of people that are really smart in exactly the same way isn't much smarter than just a few of those same people. A room full of pretty smart people with diverse experience and knowledge is WAY smarter than any smaller group. Read Surowiecki's Wisdom of Crowds.
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eduardoflores
2007-04-19T20:28:49
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Textdrive
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semigeek
2007-04-19T20:33:25
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email me - ak (at) semigeek dot com<p>Fellow Cleveland'er, Poker Player, Vegas Junkie (will be there next weekend), etc.
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brezina
2007-04-19T20:35:00
null
Among our startup friends there are only a few Outlook users. Among our friends in the population at large, nearly everyone uses Outlook for their work email. Most of the big sneezers in the valley also use Outlook.
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mattculbreth
2007-04-19T20:35:18
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That's a good idea on backups. It's nice to have an offline repository for your email. I use a Mac but I could do the same thing with Thunderbird/Mail and Spotlight.
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comment
herdrick
2007-04-19T20:37:09
null
Doomed. Would the real Steve Jobs would have put that in the Homebrew Computer Club newsletter: "You must have the key tools of today: BASIC, soldering, subtracting chips from designs, Intel 4004, sugar cereal prize whistles, etc..."
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zkinion
2007-04-19T20:38:00
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I'm all for it. I'm in the SF area until Sunday. <p>During the day is the best time, probably Friday or Saturday. Lets make it then. I have no idea where a good meet up place is, so someone familiar with the area should choose. <p>also, email me at [email protected] if anybody wants to have a cup of coffee/hang out with me during the day. <p>
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mattculbreth
2007-04-19T20:40:15
null
Ok, thanks for the answer. Do you have any plans for non-Outlook users? GMail for example?
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rms
2007-04-19T20:43:35
null
I'd kill to actually have those business cards. It'll be a while. But I can dream, right?
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Tichy
2007-04-19T20:44:31
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This and the other business card thread reminds me of an idea for a business card I once had. I don't even know how it is called, but there is this kind of plastic coating for paper that consists of stripes of lenses, so that you see something different on the paper depending on the angle you look at it from (usually this is used on cheap gadgets for children). It turns out you can create pictures for that at home, at least a popular computer magazine claimed so some time ago and explained how to do it.<p>Being into games design at the time, I dreamed about showing an animation on my business card (a flying space ship, or space invaders perhaps?). In the end I was unable to find that plastic coating anywhere (I gave up too soon), and abandoned the idea. <p>Maybe I should pick it up again, but then again business cards seem also a bit yesterday. My second favorite design from ideo is the device that scans the business card and then burns it on the spot ( ;-) <a href="http://www.ideo.com/identity/cardpyre.htm">http://www.ideo.com/identity/cardpyre.htm</a> )
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rjb
2007-04-19T20:46:16
null
Darmesh puts some things into perspective that I was very unclear about.
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comment
kogir
2007-04-19T20:49:16
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On further thought I think you're right. The need for joins can be alleviated with pointers, and sorting and grouping can be done in the application.<p>The tricky part would be the synchronization and transactional aspects, and if the system became sufficiently distributed that part could get fairly nasty.
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Tichy
2007-04-19T20:49:29
Oops - this looks like the thing I applied with to YC
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http://sf0.org/
3
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Tichy
2007-04-19T20:51:58
null
Just found this page when I was googling for the business cards. I guess it won't interest many people, but anyway, I applied to YC with a similar idea (I think, from the superficial looks of it). Rejected, but my application was not put together very well (last minute thing), and besides, it might just not be YCs area of interest.
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[ 14784 ]
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comment
usablecontent
2007-04-19T20:55:37
null
The law suit filing is here <a href="http://www.scribd.com/doc/34365/Amazons-Law-Suit-Against-Statsaholic">http://www.scribd.com/doc/34365/Amazons-Law-Suit-Against-Statsaholic</a>
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jwp
2007-04-19T20:56:20
null
Good cites. I second them. Mackay and Jaynes are excellent but can get out of hand quickly. Duda, Hart and Stork is another good hardcore option. When I need the book "for dummies," which is pretty often, the Weka book and Mitchell's Machine Learning are helpful.
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story
usablecontent
2007-04-19T20:57:06
Amazon Sues Alexaholic for Using Alexa API
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http://startupmeme.com/2007/04/19/amazon-sues-alexaholic-for-using-alexa-api/
2
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14,782
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[ 14785 ]
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comment
Tichy
2007-04-19T20:57:28
null
Hey thanks, that is really good to know. I am just toying around with the idea of writing an extension, and every now and then I collect new information. So far it seems a bit scary to me, but there are so many cool things one could make as extensions.
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Tichy
2007-04-19T20:59:19
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And yes, I think I will probably go through with it anyway, so comments are welcome.<p>(Sorry for always posting twice in my own threads - I didn't even want to open news.YCombinator right now, so I am too hectic).
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comment
usablecontent
2007-04-19T21:03:35
null
See the law suit filing here <a href="http://www.scribd.com/doc/34365/Amazons-Law-Suit-Against-Statsaholic">http://www.scribd.com/doc/34365/Amazons-Law-Suit-Against-Statsaholic</a>
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Tichy
2007-04-19T21:05:41
null
Sorry, post 3, but actually it IS a bit disappointing ;-) I wasn't so disappointed about the YC rejection because of my shoddy application (sorry for that, YC, btw). But this sf0 thing really seems to implement many of my ideas, especially the community implementing the tasks. <p>Nevertheless I think it would still be fun to work on something like this, perhaps with a different angle. Or what do you think, should I just admit defeat?
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pfedor
2007-04-19T21:07:24
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<a href="http://labs.google.com/papers/bigtable.html">http://labs.google.com/papers/bigtable.html</a>
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damien
2007-04-19T21:13:54
New GNOME Mobile & Embedded Initiative
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http://www.gnome.org/mobile/
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0
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comment
njharman
2007-04-19T21:15:29
null
All you "must be stupid not to use rdbms" people need to pry open your minds a little.<p>There are all sorts of apps that use mem/fs for storage. Like mail servers, news servers, squid servers, static http servers, log files, and sql servers (discounting direct io)<p>rdbms are (usually) just another layer ontop of fs. A very usefull layer if you need what they offer. But if not just a layer of complexity and wasted mem/cpu.<p>Modern fs have journaling and smart buffering/caching. They kind of rock and discounting them out of hand is a mistake.
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gyro_robo
2007-04-19T21:16:10
null
Thanks for that -- the Penguin computing 1Us look promising -- 16 slots!<p>It's cool theplanet has high-end options -- though I recently read an article that gave me the impression they had some serious support problems related to the EV1 merger.
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[ 14829 ]
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comment
Harj
2007-04-19T21:16:18
null
Your relationship with your co-founder is EXACTLY like being married. Think how high your bar would be for marriage and set it at the same level (namely very high - you're going to go through stupidly stressful times with his person so make sure your relationship can cope)
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herdrick
2007-04-19T21:16:30
null
Don't sweat these guys. Who can figure out what they're doing?
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comment
jsjenkins168
2007-04-19T21:25:19
null
3 words for you: Google Web Toolkit
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story
msgbeepa
2007-04-19T21:27:02
How To Submit Your Blog To "MySpace News"
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http://web2.reddit.com/goto?id=1jcaa
1
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14,794
-1
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true
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comment
madanella
2007-04-19T21:27:19
null
Competition proves (at least at some level) the validity of your idea. Do it in a different city. Join their team. Build something that complements what they do. Or just do it better.
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dyu
2007-04-19T21:33:01
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I thought Vista has stricter ways of preventing and checking for piracy?
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dawie
2007-04-19T21:35:22
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I only give them to hot chicks
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story
jkopelman
2007-04-19T21:35:46
American Idol and Venture Capital
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http://redeye.firstround.com/2007/04/american_idol.html
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5
[ 14805, 14824 ]
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busy_beaver
2007-04-19T21:37:02
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Hmm... if A players hire A players, B players hire C players, and C players hire losers, how could B players ever get hired?<p>Do the people who think up these simplistic axioms ever bother to think them through?<p>Far33d's comment about the "echo chamber" effect is well-stated. Look into why IBM missed the minicomputer boom, and why DEC missed the microcomputer boom. <p>Sam_Odio also has a valid point. Selecting the choice that offends the fewest people is what gives us so many buildings with walls and carpet that are a bland beige/white/gray color.<p>The real issue here is distinguishing between Joe 1, who's controversial because he's a bloody genius, and Joe 2, who's controversial because he's an asshole. This is further complicated by the fact that legitimate geniuses aren't always the easiest people with whom to get along. If you take this guy's advice, you'll wind up with Joe 3, who may be a good worker bee, but probably isn't ever going to do anything great.<p><p>
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