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shiro
2007-04-20T20:42:46
null
Personal experience from AllegroStore, a predecessor of AllegroCache:<p>- In AllegroCache/AllegroStore, the class definition <i>is</i> the schema definition; so if the newcomer understands class structures he understands the schema. - Hot-patching can be done through plain-old REPL. At least AllegroStore the system took care of key consistency (if it is explicit to the system). - In AllegroStore schema change is handled as class change (of persistent instances). So you can use usual MOP to write update function, which corresponds to the change scripts.<p>The main difficulty, compared to RDBMS, seemed to come from the fact that the stored objects directly formed a graph, not a table. Some people seemed to have a hard time to "think" directly in graphs, and preferred table analogy.
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dawie
2007-04-20T20:45:38
We Want a Wii! (Still)
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http://www.freakonomics.com/blog/2007/04/19/we-want-a-wii-still/
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dawie
2007-04-20T20:50:43
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We talked about this yesterday <a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=14719">http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=14719</a> which was not enough. The wii is too much and they aren't handling it in the correct manner either.
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far33d
2007-04-20T21:01:53
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It's fine to have a house and a kid if you've already got capital. Most programmers in their 30's would hopefully have sufficient savings for about a year of no income - It is a pretty well paying job after all.
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far33d
2007-04-20T21:05:44
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SPAM
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ryan
2007-04-20T21:13:22
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The first thing that came to mind was the funerals.com story in 'The Monk and The Riddle' (<a href="http://www.businessweek.com/2000/00_25/b3686077.htm)">http://www.businessweek.com/2000/00_25/b3686077.htm)</a><p>I'm not implying this applies to you :) It sounds like you are sincerely passionate about the idea.<p>I think it's a valid approach to realize there are companies out there doing this, they aren't popular, and it's probably because they aren't 'doing it right'. So if you think you know how to do it better, by all means do it! Good luck.
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felipe
2007-04-20T21:18:00
null
Seems to me that your problem is not making your to-do list more <i>efficient</i>, but actually more <i>effective</i>. Any to-do list system (rememberthemilk, GTD, Outlook, etc...) will help you with the efficiency part, but not with the effectiveness part.<p>I highly recommend you the book First Things First, by Dr. Covey: <a href="http://www.amazon.com/First-Things-Learn-Leave-Legacy/dp/0684802031/">http://www.amazon.com/First-Things-Learn-Leave-Legacy/dp/0684802031/</a>
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JohnF
2007-04-20T21:19:50
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I think one of the major contributors for the change of impressions of MSFT between older techies and younger is Linux. For us older guys, MSFT ate everyone alive during it's hayday - Borland, Novell, Quarterdeck, GEM, Amiga, and so on. It seemed that no one - not even IBM - could compete with MSFT and survive.<p>Linux thrives and it's the younger generation of techies that have carried on this battle in an unstoppable fashion. Curiousity + frustration + dogged determinism has led to a people powered movement that could not be crushed by money, FUD or other corporate methods. Democracy and anarchism is the antidote to corporatism and fascism.
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sethjohn
2007-04-20T21:30:37
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I think this dilutes the concept rather beyond the point of utility. A memorial site would need to foster a very specific mood and offer a few specific tools for this purpose.
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daltonlp
2007-04-20T21:34:41
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Such processes should be fought tooth and nail:<p><a href="http://www.fighttheprocess.com">http://www.fighttheprocess.com</a><p>
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sabat
2007-04-20T21:36:48
null
What a douche. As if there's something glorious about being one of these 'tards who can't distinguish the difference between the way computers work and the way reality works. People, when speaking and writing, do not usually intend to be excruciatingly specific. Learn2deal.
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yaacovtp
2007-04-20T21:39:03
null
Just saw <a href="http://www.nichum.com/">http://www.nichum.com/</a> launched on a jewish yahoo group. I can see niche sites like this popping up to bring together people from all over the world who can't make it to a funeral. As baby boomers get older I'm sure these sites will gain some traction.<p>On a happier note, take a look at <a href="http://onlysimchas.com/">http://onlysimchas.com/</a> It's geared towards Jewish family celebrations - births, bar/bat mitzvas, engagements, weddings, and bdays. I know plenty of people who check it on a daily basis to track their friends and community.
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vlad
2007-04-20T21:42:40
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First of all, 20 year olds are the last focus group for such a thing so it doesn't matter if you've never heard of it. That there are competitors shows there's something there. Thirdly, he's not trying to clone an existing service, he's trying to create a new one that makes sense to him from the ground up.
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lee
2007-04-20T21:46:57
null
I've always wanted something that works like Omni Outliner does - with infinite indents. I've found several todo lists on several online project management packages, but this has always been the dealkiller for me. It's what allows me to break down tasks to bite sized increments - no matter how large the tasks are originally. I've only found that OmniOutliner and LifeBalance do this...and they aren't online. Doesn't seem like rememberthemilk does it either.
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story
Sam_Odio
2007-04-20T21:56:11
StumbleUpon launches StumbleThru
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http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/04/20/new-stumbleupon-feature-site-specific-stumbling/
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0
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comment
__
2007-04-20T22:07:52
null
It seems if several startups merged into one, it wouldn't be an attractive acquisition. An acquirer might only want one subcompany, but has to buy the whole thing at a greatly increased price. Acquirers like the a-la-carte aspect of startups.<p>Startups do too. The founders started their company precisely because they didn't want their product to be averaged together with a bunch of others.
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story
rjam
2007-04-20T22:09:40
How to make money online while being a small business not based in the US
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http://www.robertoalamos.com/how-to-make-money-online-while-being-a-small-business-not-based-in-the-us
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1
[ 15764 ]
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comment
gyro_robo
2007-04-20T22:11:20
null
&gt; look at Warren Buffett's philosophy on employee and management stock options. In earlier days he attracted key management with a fair salary<p>Today's environment is much, <i>much</i> different. ALL key manangement will require equity.<p>That example is kind of like saying Apple attracted people with a 1 MHz 6502 system. Different time, different standards.
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story
brett
2007-04-20T22:13:24
Ask the Wizard: You Always Start the Last Company
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http://www.burningdoor.com/askthewizard/2007/04/you_always_start_the_last_comp.html
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1
[ 15233 ]
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Eugueny
2007-04-20T22:13:54
null
These models were "invented" for non-technical types like MBA monkeys to help them feel like they are in control of software engineering process. If you look at these models closely, you realize they resemble various principles employed by mechanical/civil engineering. <p>So what we have here is the attempt by non-technical managers, to bring some "feel" of control over something inherently complex (software development), modeled by their semi-successful methods of management employed in traditional industries (read companies like GE).<p>What those guys fail to realize is that software engineering is fundamentally more complex and, therefore, unpredictable than manufacturing industry they're used to (from their business school books).<p>Pathetic.
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comment
gyro_robo
2007-04-20T22:19:11
null
How about a "possible spam" folder, kind of a counterpart to "best", like a purgatory where stories go but can still be seen, and can make it back out if actually useful?
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juliob
2007-04-20T22:20:15
null
This cognitive carousel thing is interesting, but the whole thing seems flawed. Or at least there's not enough information on that page.
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comment
gyro_robo
2007-04-20T22:23:28
null
The general form of this is everything takes longer than expected.<p>On NerdTV, <a href="http://www.pbs.org/cringely/nerdtv/shows/">http://www.pbs.org/cringely/nerdtv/shows/</a> Max Levchin repeatedly makes the point that there's a difference between something being <i>hard</i>, and something being <i>valuable</i>.<p>Valuable things were probably hard to do, but there are plenty of things that are really hard but won't help your bottom line.
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comment
madanella
2007-04-20T22:24:04
null
"The founders started their company precisely because they didn't want their product to be averaged together with a bunch of others."<p>I have never heard that as a reason someone started a company. People start companies because they want to have control and impact and work on interesting things and have more ownership. <p>I just wonder if it might be interesting to combine a team that's working on online collaboration, for instance, with another that's working on video sharing and a third that is building a community of some sort. Think 37Signals but from the bottom up.
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comment
gyro_robo
2007-04-20T22:27:54
null
IIRC, you said that the Viaweb programmers didn't have meetings; they all pretty much were on the same page and knew what needed to be done. The company did have board meetings, though, so it sounds like something you'd do re: business more than re: development at an early stage.
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philc
2007-04-20T22:29:39
null
Both of those sound just fine, and I think the extra clutter you'll have in your namcespaces will be worth the extra exposure you get from not forcing people to sign up.
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comment
gyro_robo
2007-04-20T22:31:23
null
They sure are useful, but I think they're kind of creepy. I've seen them cheerlead beyond all rational basis for other companies, and I think having much of anything to do with them can give you a very warped perspective. It's like they're passing around Dixie cups of rather suspicious Kool-Aid.
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story
Sam_Odio
2007-04-20T22:38:00
Alexa v. Statsaholic: Tim Oreilly weighs in - sympathetic to Alexa?
null
http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/04/amazon_sues_ale.html
13
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6
[ 15385, 15416, 15430, 15276 ]
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gyro_robo
2007-04-20T22:40:40
null
Here's someone's summary from reddit:<p>"[They already had implants in their brains, and he] gave them a slideshow to watch, with a button to push to advance to the next slide. But the button was fake. What really moved the slide was a motor potential building in the brain before they were aware of the desire to move it. It unnerved the patients, because it seemed to them as if the projector was always advancing just before they'd consciously decided to advance it."
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comment
Tichy
2007-04-20T22:43:41
null
I must admit, I don't understand this equity thing yet. But it seems to me that working for a company is simply an investment. So it seems that there are three options for a company: <p>a) it is already making enough money to pay the devlopers a good salary b) it is not making enough money and takes outside investments to pay the developers a good salary = some outsider gets the equity c) they pay the developers with the equity they would have given to the outsiders in b)<p>Seems simple enough - in all cases but a equity has to be given away, so why not give it to the developers to begin with.
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juwo
2007-04-20T22:46:05
null
I disagree with the rest. Not to rain on your parade, but I honestly dont know if I would want a website as a memorial. Grief is personal. People I grieve for, I dont want to cheapen by putting them online. I simply remember or talk about them.
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comment
__
2007-04-20T22:48:45
null
"People start companies because they want to have control and impact and work on interesting things and have more ownership."<p>That's true. If these are the founders' main goals, they'll be less averse to raising the acquisition price or working in bigger teams. They don't even need to be a startup -- they could also be happy as an autonomous research project under the wing of a big company.<p>I was talking about founders hoping to get rich by selling their companies after a few years. In this case, they want the company to be small, inexpensive, and have few strings attached, to attract as many acquirers as possible.<p>Occasionally, two startups might be a perfect match for each other -- their combined product is far greater than the sum of the parts. In these cases, it makes sense to merge. It sounds like this is what you mean.
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Sam_Odio
2007-04-20T22:49:27
null
<i>Fanboys are the people who not only protect your brand, but also push it. They won't just tell a few people about your service, they'll tell the world.</i><p>PG must've already read this article. Think about it.. how many other VC/Angel firms do you know that are generating the kind of buzz that YC has?<p>Wow.. I just realized that's us. We're the fanboys for YC.
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gyro_robo
2007-04-20T23:00:53
null
This is a case of overgeneralizing. Evolution favors the organism most responsive to change; thus, one must recognize conditions how they are, instead of operating from a mental model of how they were, to increase one's chances.<p>It's <i>always</i> relative; a combination of idea and environment. The mistake is, when something doesn't work out, that we are tempted to say that the idea must be a bad idea. The correct inference is that the combination of the idea and that particular environment did not work.<p>The corresponding mistake is to assign blame to the environment and say the environment is just bad for everything. Note that hardly anyone makes <i>that</i> mistake -- instead, they say, "the environment isn't <i>ready</i> for this idea <i>yet</i>", noting that change is inevitable.<p>Another way of stating this is that the author failed to investigate <i>why</i> something was problematic. Instead, it's as if he was operating blindly; "I got burned by X, so in the future I will avoid X, because X burns." That's somewhat like a child bumping into a kitchen table and getting mad at the table. "Tables are a problem -- let's get rid of them."
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rms
2007-04-20T23:06:05
null
Fine. Mathematics is generally based on so-called "non-logical axioms" -- non proven statements that we accept based on what a person such as yourself would call faith. <p>Still, I believe in mathematics because it works. Why do you believe in the god of the Christians to the exclusion of all others?
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A-Merchant
2007-04-20T23:06:08
null
The key is keeping unrelated/spamish articles off the main page, but preventing users from downvoting controversial articles.<p>
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comment
raganwald
2007-04-20T23:08:32
null
It looks very much like I didn't do a very good job of communicating my thoughts. I was actually trying to write an essay about the importance of the marginal.<p>Can you be a little more literal and tell me what part of the post seems to say something about distinguishing the difference between computers and reality?<p>Also, I thought I was hand waving the "99" thing and saying it isn't important how accurate the number is. Should I be more emphatic?
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story
viralvid
2007-04-20T23:09:04
Homepage redesign
null
http://redesign.teenwag.com
1
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15,237
0
[ 15255 ]
null
true
15,238
comment
juwo
2007-04-20T23:09:16
null
released! <a href="http://juwo.com">http://juwo.com</a> Please provide your feedback - via email or the newer thread I started
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comment
juwo
2007-04-20T23:09:30
null
released! <a href="http://juwo.com">http://juwo.com</a> Please provide your feedback - via email or the newer thread I started
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comment
viralvid
2007-04-20T23:09:35
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true
15,241
comment
viralvid
2007-04-20T23:09:50
null
some parts of teenwag are done in Ruby on rails though
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true
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comment
juwo
2007-04-20T23:10:09
null
released! <a href="http://juwo.com">http://juwo.com</a> Please provide your feedback - via email or the newer thread I started
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story
viralvid
2007-04-20T23:10:51
python perl ruby c cpp lisp it has it all
null
http://8languages.teenwag.com
1
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15,243
-1
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null
true
15,244
comment
viralvid
2007-04-20T23:14:17
null
I use <a href="http://colr.org">http://colr.org</a>
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story
viralvid
2007-04-20T23:15:07
How does PG do autolinking of comments in News Yc i see we dont need a href, python cant use regexes, can you share the lisp code ?
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1
null
15,245
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[ 15250 ]
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true
15,246
comment
jaggederest
2007-04-20T23:24:01
null
1. Where did I put the doritos?<p>2. Man, these doritos are good.<p>3. Wow, someone just handed me a lot of money.
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ecuzzillo
2007-04-20T23:25:39
null
I don't think Myspace has any merit. I think it's doing well for the same reason that hit songs are doing well: random network butterfly effects. That experiment about showing people which songs were popular vs. not showing them-- due to totally random noise, one song (or startup) will be a little ahead, and then whoosh, it has all the listeners (or users). There's nothing about Myspace itself that makes it more likely among a field of similar, better-designed contenders to do well; it's just the random fluctuations of the market that made it king.
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story
sharpshoot
2007-04-20T23:26:58
Pirates of Silicon Valley (Full movie)
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http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7941901498664355924&q=pirates+of+silicon+valley&hl=en
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null
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3
[ 15389, 15284, 15292, 15275, 15280, 15274 ]
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comment
pg
2007-04-20T23:44:25
null
Off the top of my head maybe 5-10% are over 30 and 5-10% nonhackers. I don't think we've ever had anyone who was over 30 and not a hacker.
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pg
2007-04-20T23:48:18
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true
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story
joshwa
2007-04-20T23:48:23
How much did karma help? (How many of the top 30 news.yc users got interviews?)
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4
null
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18
[ 15257, 15304, 15262, 15361, 15253, 15254 ]
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story
Sam_Odio
2007-04-20T23:52:33
MySpace: Better than Porn?
null
http://mashable.com/2007/04/20/myspace-porn/
2
null
15,252
1
[ 15466, 15265 ]
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comment
nostrademons
2007-04-20T23:55:05
null
I've been hovering between #11 and #17 on the karma rankings and did not get an interview.
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comment
joshwa
2007-04-20T23:56:17
null
not that karma would be the <i>only</i> criteria-- I have a strong feeling my rejection was because my co-founder couldn't move to boston.
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comment
joshwa
2007-04-20T23:57:17
null
<i>sigh</i> why haven't you blocked submissions from this domain yet?
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nostrademons
2007-04-20T23:58:27
null
Just guessing, but I think he means that when he types in <a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=15250,">http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=15250,</a> it appears as a hyperlink, even though we don't explicitly add an anchor tag.<p>The rest of the title is baffling to me: Python can do regexps through the 're' module, there are Lisp regexp packages available, and I'd imagine news.YC uses one of those.<p>P.S. The hyperlink regexp seems to pick up trailing punctuation, like periods, commas, and parentheses. Any chance we can exclude them from the link target? I think several of my links have broken because of that.
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Sam_Odio
2007-04-21T00:00:18
null
I'm also interested in how many of the top 30 applied and didn't get interviews? Of course, there are a lot of confounding variables here. A higher offer rate among the YC top 30 could possibly have nothing to do with karma.<p>For example, versus the typical SFP applicant, the top 30 might:<p>- Spend more time online & therefore more time on their project<p>- Be more knowledgeable about the startup scene<p>- Have a better understanding of what YCombinator is looking for<p>- Etc.
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[ 15500, 15310, 15316 ]
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juwo
2007-04-21T00:03:02
null
thank you!<p>I notice my karma has slid from 50 to 29 in 3 days!<p>Sam, were you able to see a demo?
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juwo
2007-04-21T00:04:24
null
actually the color scheme for my website is from dreamweaver 8 (Adobe) - this same site. So if you find fault...
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:05:37
Iframe resize for all browsers Any one know how to make it work?
null
http://sfbay.craigslist.org/sfc/cpg/315743871.html
1
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15,260
-1
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null
true
15,261
story
usablecontent
2007-04-21T00:05:48
Google Web History - Minority Report In the Making
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http://startupmeme.com/2007/04/20/google-web-history-minority-report-in-the-making/
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mattculbreth
2007-04-21T00:06:08
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I'm pretty high up in the karma, didn't get an interview. That's cool though, I like spending time here regardless.
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mattculbreth
2007-04-21T00:06:37
Good luck on the interviews!
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mattculbreth
2007-04-21T00:06:58
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A friendly good luck to anybody interviewing tomorrow. Tell us how it went!
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:07:55
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<a href="http://www.teenwag.com/poll?n=1544">http://www.teenwag.com/poll?n=1544</a> Is it really better?
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jward
2007-04-21T00:10:10
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Paul has said before that he doesn't look so much at karma but instead at the quality and type of comments and submissions. When I heard that he was going to be using YC News as a way to filter applicants I was more than a little put off until he clarified that.<p>I'm sure he's looking for intelligence, creativity, positivity, and passion. High karma can reflect this, but it can also reflect an ability to be able to grind karma.<p>
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Goladus
2007-04-21T00:13:10
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Do you have a link to the experiment?<p>Also, when you said there were better-designed contenders, did you have anything in particular in mind?<p>Don't forget, myspace was in the first batch (if not the very first) of sites for bands to upload their music and have it streamed over the internet. It had the streaming audio, and the strong community features. The initial communities grew up around the bands. It wasn't completely random that Myspace was successful, they were providing a real and useful service.<p><a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=15036">http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=15036</a><p><a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=13112">http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=13112</a>
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:21:09
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Breaking: Alec Baldwin Lashes Out at 11-Year-Old Daughter Degrading voicemessage <a href="http://www.teenwag.com/showvideo/4289">http://www.teenwag.com/showvideo/4289</a> Audio <a href="http://alec.teenwag.com/playmusic/222">http://alec.teenwag.com/playmusic/222</a><p> Virginia Tech killer video <a href="http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4183">http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4183</a> VIRGINIA TECH SHOOTER CHO SEUNG HUI <a href="http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4184">http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4184</a> Virginia Tech Shooter Home Video NBC News Cho Seung-Hui <a href="http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4182">http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4182</a>
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:21:13
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Breaking: Alec Baldwin Lashes Out at 11-Year-Old Daughter Degrading voicemessage <a href="http://www.teenwag.com/showvideo/4289">http://www.teenwag.com/showvideo/4289</a> Audio <a href="http://alec.teenwag.com/playmusic/222">http://alec.teenwag.com/playmusic/222</a><p> Virginia Tech killer video <a href="http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4183">http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4183</a> VIRGINIA TECH SHOOTER CHO SEUNG HUI <a href="http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4184">http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4184</a> Virginia Tech Shooter Home Video NBC News Cho Seung-Hui <a href="http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4182">http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4182</a>
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:21:34
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isnt this really useful i love news y combinator
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:22:01
I want a general nonstartup folder in News where we can post non startup news vote up if you concur
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:22:06
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Digg sucks
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brett
2007-04-21T00:22:09
I'd rather be Microsoft than Yahoo - (37signals)
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http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/387-id-rather-be-microsoft-than-yahoo
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:23:07
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<a href="http://www.teenwag.com/playvideo/4294">http://www.teenwag.com/playvideo/4294</a>
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:23:16
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Breaking: Alec Baldwin Lashes Out at 11-Year-Old Daughter Degrading voicemessage <a href="http://www.teenwag.com/showvideo/4289">http://www.teenwag.com/showvideo/4289</a> Audio <a href="http://alec.teenwag.com/playmusic/222">http://alec.teenwag.com/playmusic/222</a><p> Virginia Tech killer video <a href="http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4183">http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4183</a> VIRGINIA TECH SHOOTER CHO SEUNG HUI <a href="http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4184">http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4184</a> Virginia Tech Shooter Home Video NBC News Cho Seung-Hui <a href="http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4182">http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4182</a>
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:23:24
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Breaking: Alec Baldwin Lashes Out at 11-Year-Old Daughter Degrading voicemessage <a href="http://www.teenwag.com/showvideo/4289">http://www.teenwag.com/showvideo/4289</a> Audio <a href="http://alec.teenwag.com/playmusic/222">http://alec.teenwag.com/playmusic/222</a><p> Virginia Tech killer video <a href="http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4183">http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4183</a> VIRGINIA TECH SHOOTER CHO SEUNG HUI <a href="http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4184">http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4184</a> Virginia Tech Shooter Home Video NBC News Cho Seung-Hui <a href="http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4182">http://teenwag.com/playvideo/4182</a>
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:23:57
who are most valuable vcs? in web20
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:24:58
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I d rather be a startup that can bilk google and paul graham at the same time ;)
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:25:36
How useful are vcs like paul graham?
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sharpshoot
2007-04-21T00:27:57
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:28:02
Is Scribd merely a porn aggregator?
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mattjaynes
2007-04-21T00:29:39
Open Source Business Models
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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/open_source_business_models_web_20_expo.php
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:30:40
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all the docs on scribd is merely porn... i wonder wat he pitched pg ;)
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rms
2007-04-21T00:30:48
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Information wants to be free!<p>Don't delete this, a link isn't illegal. It's up to Google to police their site for hosting a video, all that news.yc is doing is linking.
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mattjaynes
2007-04-21T00:31:38
Don't be a hero: Giving up is good - (37signals)
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http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/386-dont-be-a-hero-giving-up-is-good
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:32:02
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take a chill pill
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:32:20
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yeah pg dont keep deleting all not yc stuff ;)
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mattjaynes
2007-04-21T00:34:14
Lifetime free Pro accounts to developers - (SmugMug)
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http://blogs.smugmug.com/don/2007/04/20/lifetime-free-pro-accounts-to-developers/
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viralvid
2007-04-21T00:39:40
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Well i was saying the python re does it well and the pg lisp one seems to pick up any thing that goes behind link so was hoping he ll fix it
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brett
2007-04-21T00:42:54
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Same boat. I'm with joshwa in having a cofounder unwilling to move to boston. Pretty sure that played a <i>way</i> bigger role than my comments here.
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jkush
2007-04-21T00:45:25
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Heh. Good link. I am not married to this idea but for whatever reason, I seem to come back to something along this vein. I'm not sure if the timing is right yet, but someday it will be.<p>Thanks for the link and the "good luck". Same to you.<p>
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sharpshoot
2007-04-21T00:45:32
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What was really fascinating was just how badly Bill Gates wanted to win.<p>If you also read Startup by Jerry Kaplan, you'll note that Bill was very keen to copy the pen OS that GO created and on seeing a demo as soon. In the end windows mobile won out though.<p>What did u find interesting about the characters?
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SwellJoe
2007-04-21T00:45:45
Jessica Livingston's Founders at Work talk at Google
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6hoPw5hItY
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jkush
2007-04-21T00:47:13
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What I love most about the competitors I've found on Google, is that they are all just so very, very bad.
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jkush
2007-04-21T00:49:50
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Please do!
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Sam_Odio
2007-04-21T00:53:14
Slide.com becomes MySpace for slideshows
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http://mashable.com/2007/04/20/myspace-for-slideshows/
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jkush
2007-04-21T00:54:57
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You're not raining on my parade juwo. I asked for feedback and got it. I can see why you might think having an online memorial would cheapen the memory. If you look at the memorial sites out there, they do cheapen it because they don't do a very good job. <p>The concept really isn't about the creation of an online memorial. It's really about providing a way for the LIVING people to come together, remember and talk. What's important here is the process of remembering and sharing with the intention of creating a memorial. My idea is simply a way to foster that connection. <p>I hope this frames it in a different light for you.
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ecuzzillo
2007-04-21T00:56:33
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<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/15/magazine/15wwlnidealab.t.html?_r=1&ref=magazine&oref=slogin">http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/15/magazine/15wwlnidealab.t.html?_r=1&ref=magazine&oref=slogin</a><p>is the study in question. No, I didn't have any Myspace competitors in mind; I just assumed that something so badly designed must have at least one better-designed competitor. Maybe a bad assumption, in retrospect.
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madanella
2007-04-21T00:56:39
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Yeah. I just think about this every time a VC or some pundit says "but it's just a feature". I think it would be interesting to see a combination of these 'features' become a major player. <p>The goal is to get acquired and have a relatively big payday. But I think it's possible that a group of small players could merge and grow big enough to go public and compete with the big players. Of course the biggest challenge would be deciding who was 'in charge'. <p>If your company has 200,000 users and you can join forces with a few other similarly sized projects the new company would have more thinking and more manpower and resources and could benefit from some overlap in function and might be able to grow beyond some theshold that increases valuation multiples because of the viability of the company as an independent entity, and maybe even profitability. I think those things could very well outweigh the ease of fit of a feature. I'm sure it would depend on the buyers but it just might open doors to buyers that wouldn't be interested otherwise.
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