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bilbo0s
2007-04-29T16:38:13
null
You know I think that this means that people should probably think twice before basing a startup on a feature or technology that Google could easily implement. By implement, I mean either have their engineers hack out, or buy. To assume that they will buy it from you is foolish by the way. I'm looking at you two GUBA and Revver, but I may as well be talking about every web 2.0 startup I've had the misfortune of having to look at in the past 12 months.<p>Are there ANY original thinkers out there? Where are you at? Money is waiting for you.<p>I would like, for once, for three kids to come up to me and say that they have World of Warcraft or Second Life running with full 3D hardware acceleration inside of the browser. WITHOUT A GAD BLESSED PLUGIN OR SECURITY WARNING!!! This would be something compelling that is difficult to implement. It is also something that would take people more than 2 weeks to duplicate.<p>Think of it this way, how many people get rich anymore by writing say, IDE's? None, because we all use what Microsoft, Adobe, or Eclipse gives us, for FREE? The same thing will happen very soon with social networking, it will be included with your hosting. Probably by leveraging open source. So everyone will be able to start a story telling site with photo uploading for illustration and social features. However, I think it will be more difficult for someone to make a web based Joost with television recording and social features. So if you can, your asking price just went WAY up kid.<p>The things I have outlined are hard, and that is the point. If I invest in something, I don't want to hear about 35 other startups doing the exact same thing.<p>I'm not just talking about the web 2.0 people here. You would not believe the number of 'Second Life' knockoffs that are about to hit the market. They all expect that 3 to 30 million people will download and install their plugin, or click 'Yes' on their security warning. You know, the one to give this startup you never heard of FULL access to your machine. That's OK though they tell me, because they only need to get the early adopters to spread the word. The TECH SAVVY early adopters. Yeah, you heard me right, the ones MOST likely to know NOT to give a startup they've never heard of full access to their machines!<p>If ANYONE can find a tech startup that doesn't infringe copyrights and actually has technology that would take a minute to develop, I think I would fall over from shock.<p>Sorry about this rant. Just in the office on a Sunday looking at knockoff after knockoff. But hey, I just work for consultants for investors, it's not my money. It is frustrating that no one wants to listen to the minority report though.
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17,889
17,889
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[ 18190, 17946, 18082, 17943, 18051 ]
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comment
bsaunder
2007-04-29T16:50:27
null
First of all, thanks for the constructive criticism. This is my first blog article, so I'm begining to realize the sensitivity of carefully wording things.<p>With regards to my constraint "(and I mean really program)", I merely wanted to exclude those people who claim to "know about" LISP, or who are not competent in LISP (and I think I have a weaker threshold for competent than you).<p>I guess I tend to disagree with your statement:<p>"Similarly, a competent programmer is likely to be versed in several languages, and likely they will fall into different paradigms."<p>I think "a competent programmer" is a low bar (70 percential?). I don't think it's true that competent programmers are likely to be "competent" in several languages that fall into different paradigms.<p>Also, I feel like LISP's paradigm is so far removed from most others (and with arguably a superset of concepts), that any programmer who is competent in LISP <i>IS</i> likely to be competent is several other languages that span different paradigms. Agreed if there exists one programmer out there who <i>ONLY</i> knows LISP, they lack the complete conceptual understanding I'm asserting.<p>It seems to me that programmers who tend to write spaghetti code and/or over complicate matters will abandon LISP out of fustration before they achieve "competency in LISP".<p>The point of the article was to assert that "competency in LISP" implies much more than "competency in LISP" and that this statement is not true of most other programming languages.<p>Sorry you feel this article propagated misconceptions, I'll try to do better next time.
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story
BioGeek
2007-04-29T17:17:04
Replicating Silicon Valley
null
http://www.unionsquareventures.com/2006/05/replicating_sil.html
2
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17,902
0
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comment
noelchurchill
2007-04-29T17:20:46
null
Hi. I'm Noel from San Diego. I'm beginning a new startup and yc news has been very interesting. Maybe I'll apply for the next round?
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comment
kevinrose
2007-04-29T17:32:36
null
Its definitely a prank. Anyway he is now on Tom Kytes' blog. <a href="http://tkyte.blogspot.com/2007/04/how-not-to-ask-question.html">http://tkyte.blogspot.com/2007/04/how-not-to-ask-question.html</a><p>Another internet legend is born.
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comment
jamesbritt
2007-04-29T17:32:43
null
This is a good tutorial. It's the first I found that showed how to do some basic but useful stuff, such as compile, include external files, and have code write to STDOUT. The other Haskell articles I'd seen jumped right into type theory and such; I prefer hands-on.<p>With Scheme in 48 Hours you get running code you can hack around with to see what does what.
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Latinflava
2007-04-29T17:59:37
null
very interesting post, and even more interesting "rant" bilbo0s. Its that knockoff are knocking off other knockoff its insane, lol seems inovation is on vacation right now, lets hope it gets back soon.
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ecuzzillo
2007-04-29T18:07:53
null
Extroverts are built to receive strong, low-level satisfaction from doing so. Introverts are build to receive strong, low-level stress from doing so. We're just introverted, so we don't say so as often as extroverts say that face-to-face interaction is so healthy.
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danielha
2007-04-29T18:35:44
null
The same way a boom affects the market for startups. But in the opposite direction.<p>Seriously though: In a direct sense, the effects might not be too great for us "Web 2.0" startups (people don't cut back on YouTube when money is tight). But there would be less money going around, so at least indirectly it's going to be a degree tougher to run any kind of business.
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comment
startupper
2007-04-29T18:39:43
null
Relevant reading:<p>" Many more startups, including ours, were initially run out of apartments. If the laws against such things were actually enforced, most startups wouldn't happen.<p>That could be a problem in fussier countries. If Hewlett and Packard tried running an electronics company out of their garage in Switzerland, the old lady next door would report them to the municipal authorities."<p>from "Why startups condense in America" PG.<p>
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comment
startupper
2007-04-29T18:45:59
null
Ycombinator News: Soon to be acquired by Google?
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17,591
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story
pg
2007-04-29T19:00:38
1996: Yahoo co-founders turn down $3 million each
null
http://www.metroactive.com/papers/metro/04.11.96/yahoo-9615.html
14
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2
[ 17929 ]
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comment
ed
2007-04-29T19:09:13
null
I emailed Jessica from YC and was told that YC is unwilling to sponsor any event they don't organize. Given that we couldn't really make this a "YC Thing" and wouldn't be able to use their space, does anyone still think this is a good idea?<p>I'm afraid that without official support any attempt to organize a meet-up would yield similar results compared to past attempts. PG -- chime in!!
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comment
nostrademons
2007-04-29T19:19:27
null
More is better, obviously, but you don't actually need to know that much to build a successful startup. If you just keep hacking at it and ruthlessly revise the code you've already written, you'll get there eventually.<p>IMHO, the best benefit of learning a lot is knowing how to <i>not</i> write code. A journeyman programmer can crank out lots of code in a short period of time and quickly implement new features. A master programmer can recognize that by restating the problem a little, you don't have to write <i>any</i> code and a simple, elegant solution falls out of tools and algorithms that are already available.<p>Of course, the best way to become a better programmer is to hack on your startup a lot. That's why you're best off starting even if you don't think you're ready yet.
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story
usablecontent
2007-04-29T19:22:20
The Pangs of Two Becoming One - New York Times
null
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/28/technology/28online.html?ex=1335412800&en=41d73a181332e594&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss
1
null
17,914
0
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comment
e1ven
2007-04-29T19:30:15
null
I've found that for the design phase of projects, it's VITAL to be in the same room. <p>There are tools to replicate so many things- You can use phone calls, and shared whiteboards.. But they are half-way measures- They don't let you work against each other, or argue back and forth easily, making changes to a design..<p>I've worked with friends in other states before, and at times, we'd struggle for a design problem for several weeks, before I flew down and we hashed it out in one all-night session of pizza and caffeine. <p>If it's pure code to spec, perhaps you'll be able to get away without out, but even then, working in the same place ensures that you stay friends, and that you can talk over a design while going out for lunch.<p>If at all possible, I strongly recommend working in the same place.<p>
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story
mattjaynes
2007-04-29T19:35:21
7 Awesome Things Built on the Digg API
null
http://mashable.com/2007/04/29/7-awesome-things-built-on-the-digg-api/
8
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17,916
0
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17,917
story
usablecontent
2007-04-29T19:37:34
VentureBlog: The Softwareless Software Company
null
http://www.ventureblog.com/articles/indiv/2007/001276.html
1
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17,917
0
null
null
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17,918
story
mattjaynes
2007-04-29T19:40:32
Great Article: Connectivity Creates Coherence
null
http://ourfounder.typepad.com/leblog/2007/04/connectivity_cr.html
1
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17,918
0
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null
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17,919
story
usablecontent
2007-04-29T19:44:34
VentureBlog: Sillywood, Part 1: Believing Makes It So
null
http://www.ventureblog.com/articles/indiv/2004/000670.html
3
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17,919
0
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17,920
story
usablecontent
2007-04-29T19:45:02
VentureBlog: Sillywood, Part 2: Perceived Success Breeds Success
null
http://www.ventureblog.com/articles/indiv/2004/000688.html
3
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17,920
0
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17,921
story
usablecontent
2007-04-29T19:45:09
VentureBlog: Sillywood, Part 3: All The Money is in Sequels
null
http://www.ventureblog.com/articles/indiv/2004/000877.html
1
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17,921
0
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story
mattjaynes
2007-04-29T19:48:37
Has the revelation that Hornbaker is a convicted extortionist changed your view on the Alexaholic snafu?
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1
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17,922
1
[ 17924 ]
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story
jcwentz
2007-04-29T19:51:03
Fatsecret: For Fat People Who Want To Be Less So
null
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/04/29/fatsecret-for-fat-people-who-want-to-be-less-so/
4
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17,923
1
[ 18007 ]
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comment
usablecontent
2007-04-29T19:52:08
null
Nice question: I dont think it has changed my views, but I have seen others changing lanes after the news broke out
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comment
usablecontent
2007-04-29T19:55:57
null
Ability to find out if the new article that I am posting has already been posted in the past or not. I wanted to post a few articles from venture blog but before posting I searched on Google using "title of article + news.ycombinator" as a query.
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363
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story
usablecontent
2007-04-29T20:04:04
Free Does Matter
null
http://startupmeme.com/2007/04/29/free-does-matter/
3
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17,926
1
[ 18058 ]
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comment
usablecontent
2007-04-29T20:17:42
null
Really nice video, loved the creativity
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17,809
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story
npk
2007-04-29T20:21:57
Vudu: Another Company in the Realm of Internet TV
null
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/29/business/yourmoney/29vudu.html?8br
1
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17,928
0
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null
null
17,929
comment
vlad
2007-04-29T20:26:47
null
My favorite part:<p>"Netscape... will soon include several leading directories... rather than sell a single featured directory location to one company...<p>The strategy is a classic win-win... it promises to spur the growth of several (web directory) companies at the same time, rather than... loading up one "winner" with expenses that are so high, financial success becomes problematic."<p>Does anybody know if Excite was supposed to be an exact clone of Yahoo! (including the peppy name), or did they innovate in anything?
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17,911
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[ 17931 ]
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story
jcwentz
2007-04-29T20:31:16
Google checkout buttons now appearing on search result pages
null
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&safe=off&q=bust-up&btnG=Search
1
null
17,930
0
null
null
null
17,931
comment
jcwentz
2007-04-29T20:33:04
null
Excite was a search engine, while Yahoo was a directory; they were quite different.
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17,911
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comment
russ
2007-04-29T20:40:46
null
Or better yet, join #news.yc on EFNet and say 'hello'!
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17,866
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story
pg
2007-04-29T20:42:48
GigaOM: Hey Vudu, CableCos slow, not stupid
null
http://gigaom.com/2007/04/29/vudu/
1
null
17,933
0
null
null
null
17,934
story
andrew_null
2007-04-29T20:59:29
Andrew Chen: 10 tips for meeting people at industry events
null
http://andrewchen.typepad.com/andrew_chens_blog/2007/02/how_to_meet_peo.html
12
null
17,934
1
[ 17964, 18524 ]
null
null
17,935
story
andrew_null
2007-04-29T21:01:15
Andrew Chen: How do you find a badass co-founder?
null
http://andrewchen.typepad.com/andrew_chens_blog/2007/03/how_do_you_find.html
1
null
17,935
0
null
null
null
17,936
story
brett
2007-04-29T21:13:38
A VC: Why 15 Million Is A Big Number
null
http://avc.blogs.com/a_vc/2007/04/why_15_million_.html
4
null
17,936
1
[ 18018 ]
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comment
herdrick
2007-04-29T21:23:48
null
It already has. My guess is that the dollar will rise.
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17,818
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[ 18071 ]
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story
waleedka
2007-04-29T21:37:03
How do you find a web designer for your web startup?
null
8
null
17,938
13
[ 18026, 17956, 17966 ]
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17,939
comment
jaggederest
2007-04-29T21:42:41
null
I'm going through this over the weekend. The really trippy part, to me, is where he switches from using haskell to define the scheme parser, to using scheme to define the standard library (of course, run through the parser that was just written)
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17,816
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comment
rwalker
2007-04-29T21:50:37
null
Is it my fault that I used the upgrade option or is it Microsoft's fault that the upgrade option doesn't work well? I think the latter.
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17,897
17,824
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17,941
story
bootload
2007-04-29T21:57:57
MySQL 6.0 includes Falcon storage engine
null
http://www.computerworlduk.com/technology/applications/databases/news/index.cfm?newsid=2775
1
null
17,941
0
null
null
null
17,942
story
bootload
2007-04-29T21:59:17
7 steps to a green datacentre
null
http://www.computerworlduk.com/management/it-business/it-department/hot-topic/index.cfm?articleid=484
1
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17,942
0
null
null
null
17,943
comment
inklesspen
2007-04-29T21:59:42
null
Yeah, I'll get right on that. I bet a OpenGL engine will just _fly_ in JavaScript. And of course, all browsers give the JS runtime full access to the video hardware.
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null
17,900
17,889
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17,944
story
bootload
2007-04-29T22:02:43
Google axes calendar maintenance
null
http://www.computerworlduk.com/technology/internet/applications/news/index.cfm?newsid=2757
4
null
17,944
0
null
null
null
17,945
story
purblind
2007-04-29T22:10:52
Jetpacked: News.YC an example of next phase of social news
null
http://www.jetpacked.com/newsycombinatorcom-startup-news-done-right/
5
null
17,945
2
[ 18084, 18149 ]
null
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17,946
comment
bootload
2007-04-29T22:12:47
null
<i>'... I would like, for once, for three kids to come up to me and say that they have World of Warcraft or Second Life running with full 3D hardware acceleration inside of the browser ... WITHOUT A GAD BLESSED PLUGIN ...'</i><p>gne or game never ending did just that (but it still required a plugin). The problem is twofold. Browsers are sandboxed, to get performance for 3D requires access to hardware and what makes money might not be what you first think of. (thats three).<p>Take for instance flickr. They started off with gne, then the front end team did about 5 different apps before they realised allowing people upload & share photos. <p><i>'... Are there ANY original thinkers out there? Where are you at? ...'</i> They are about. Maybe that's a good news.yc question?
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17,900
17,889
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17,947
story
byrneseyeview
2007-04-29T22:19:54
The Hacker's Guide to Investors
null
http://paulgraham.com/guidetoinvestors.html
59
null
17,947
46
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null
null
17,948
story
danw
2007-04-29T22:22:00
Microsoft grew more than the whole of Google's sales this last quarter
null
http://www.vecosys.com/2007/04/29/putting-google-into-perspective/
5
null
17,948
2
[ 18005, 18158 ]
null
null
17,949
comment
jaggederest
2007-04-29T22:22:49
null
Some of my best work has been done with clients that I never met. As always, ymmv, but if you can find a good person online, someone who you can trust and be friends with, there's no reason it won't work.
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17,850
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comment
PStamatiou
2007-04-29T22:41:25
null
Amazon S3 anyone? People have started doing MySQL stuff with it, I think we are to the point where we can use it for "IFS" stuff. And with things like JungleDisk WebDAV making online storage as seamless as any other drive, we are pretty much there already.
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17,951
story
farmer
2007-04-29T22:51:03
Writing programs for people to read
null
http://weblog.raganwald.com/2007/04/writing-programs-for-people-to-read.html
7
null
17,951
0
null
null
null
17,952
comment
jmw
2007-04-29T23:02:16
null
I don't think it has to be organized by YC at all - this is more about Boston/other city based networking than it is about. Jessica/Paul/YCombinator are busy enough as it is - but that's no reason why there shouldn't be a Boston meetup.<p>I currently live in Boston close to the Mass Ave bridge, but spend a decent amount of time roaming coffeeshops in both Boston and Cambridge.<p>I'd propose a meetup this Thursday (the 3rd) evening or Sunday (the 6th) evening either at Diesal Cafe in Sommerville (my favorite coffeeshop to hack in <a href="http://www.diesel-cafe.com/">http://www.diesel-cafe.com/</a> accessible via the T), or the Espresso Royale on comm ave. <p>I'll bring my cofounder, and maybe 1 or 2 friends if anyone's around and interested.
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[ 17967 ]
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story
usablecontent
2007-04-29T23:16:07
ABCNews Gets a Web 2.0 Make Over
null
http://startupmeme.com/2007/04/29/abc-news-gets-a-web-20-make-over/
1
null
17,953
0
null
null
null
17,954
story
sri
2007-04-29T23:32:16
Book Idea: Great Teams At Work
null
2
null
17,954
2
[ 17955, 17991 ]
null
null
17,955
comment
sri
2007-04-29T23:32:23
null
Interviews with teams that created: Flash, iPhone, Google Talk (heard that they won the Google Founders award), Akamai<p> (ok maybe these are trade secrets that companies won't release -- but it'll be really cool...)<p><p>Their strenghts, how they work, what "process" they follow etc<p> what do you guys think?
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17,954
17,954
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comment
hacker64
2007-04-29T23:49:12
null
I use elance.com. I post my projects there and they bid.
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17,938
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[ 17974, 18146 ]
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comment
johnmartin78
2007-04-29T23:50:18
null
'Most investors are "bottoms" in the sense that the startups they like most are those that are rough with them. When Google stuck Kleiner and Sequoia with a $75 million premoney valuation, their reaction was probably "Ouch! That feels so good."'<p>I don't think I've read a funnier paragraph about venture investing. Brilliant observation.
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17,947
null
[ 18029, 17961 ]
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17,958
story
source
2007-04-29T23:56:00
Micro Persuasion: ABCNews.com Relaunches with Citizen Journalism
null
http://www.micropersuasion.com/2007/04/abcnewscom_rela.html
1
null
17,958
0
null
null
null
17,959
comment
MEHOM
2007-04-30T00:11:43
null
I agree with all of you. Have been in project management and product development situations that most of you have been in. What I discovered is the 1st meeting. This initial meeting determines whether the project has a chance to succeed or fail. The way I ran my meetings is that each and every stakeholders must be there in person. This goal of this 1st meeting to have everyone determines everything in terms of goals and objectives. During this time, everyone gets the "feel" whether they believe in the project and whether they believe in their future teammates.<p>From my experience, most people do not know what to do during this first meeting. In most cases, it is their problem. <p>In my case, I believe in establishing a Tangible Plan (or Overview) that everyone can unified with. It is about getting everyone to commit to the big picture (the goal, its specific and to each other). <p>The question is getting everyone to work through specifics of the grand goal. <p>From my experience, not everyone are willing to be teamplayers. During the 1st meeting, it is about seeing who wants to play teamball and who wants to play "Lone Ranger". <p>Team collaboration is not about software, It is about a process of getting people to collaborate. 100% team management psychology. ... Remember losers promises while winners commit. Each of your success will be about getting people to commit. .... Thank you very much for all responses.
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amichail
2007-04-30T00:13:25
Is anyone using Groovy? I've started using it to do unit test cases for a server written in Java.
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[ 17962 ]
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usablecontent
2007-04-30T00:14:00
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The fact that PG has been a founder and an investor just helps things.
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amichail
2007-04-30T00:14:46
null
It seems that Groovy is an excellent dynamic language to use since you can mix it freely with Java code. This allows you to write unit test cases in Groovy, even if you insist on writing everything else in Java. <p>It's also useful for prototyping certain parts of your app and then later you can convert the code to Java if you like.
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[ 18014 ]
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usablecontent
2007-04-30T00:19:56
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"Since valuations are made up, founders shouldn't care too much about them. That's not the part to focus on. In fact, a high valuation can be a bad thing. If you take funding at a premoney valuation of $10 million, you won't be selling the company for 20. You'll have to sell for over 50 for the VCs to get even a 5x return, which is low to them. More likely they'll want you to hold out for 100. But needing to get a high price decreases the chance of getting bought at all; many companies can buy you for $10 million, but only a handful for 100. And since a startup is like a pass/fail course for the founders, what you want to optimize is your chance of a good outcome, not the percentage of the company you keep." [Excerpt taken from the Essay]<p>This is exactly the reason Technorati is finding it hard to sell, whereas MyBlogLog got sold within no time and Newroo even before they could launch the product.
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omouse
2007-04-30T00:28:31
null
What's with this guy and top 10 lists? :P
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jward
2007-04-30T00:29:30
null
Necessity is a powerful motivator. Until you <i>need</i> to learn something the drive isn't cranked up.
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[ 18030 ]
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pellegrino
2007-04-30T00:31:09
null
Ive used these guys. Low cost, solid quality.<p><a href="http://monvia.com/">http://monvia.com/</a>
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[ 17997, 17984 ]
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comment
ed
2007-04-30T00:32:33
null
I think this sounds great. I'll start a new thread and propose the location. I think it'd be a good idea to tentatively set the date for Sunday the 6th to give people a little more time to plan.
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[ 17973 ]
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story
Sam_Odio
2007-04-30T00:37:34
Reddit Case Study: How personality impacts success
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http://www.startup-review.com/blog/reddit-case-study-how-personality-impacts-product-success.php
20
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11
[ 17979, 17976, 18192 ]
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story
ed
2007-04-30T00:41:57
Boston Meet-Up for YC Founders and News Contributors (Sunday, May 6th)
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19
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24
[ 17972, 17988, 17993, 18015, 18116, 17989, 18142, 19977, 17981, 18117, 17998, 18038, 17971 ]
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comment
MEHOM
2007-04-30T00:44:04
null
If you had a marketing person in France, a QA guy in Singapore, another pair of developers located in NY city and London, England. How do you get everyone collaborating as a team? Setting up a fair meeting time for everyone can be challenging.
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comment
twism
2007-04-30T00:44:21
null
Im there... Where?
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comment
ed
2007-04-30T00:48:59
null
-------------------------------------------------<p>FACTS:<p>What: Boston Meet-up for YC founders and contributors<p>When: May 6th, 7:00PM<p>Where: Espresso Royale Cafe on Commonwealth Ave in Boston ( <a href="http://espressoroyale.com/location.php?id=9">http://espressoroyale.com/location.php?id=9</a> )<p> -------------------------------------------------<p>DETAILS:<p>I'm hoping to organize a Boston area meet-up for News.YC'ers and YC founders on May 6th, at 7:00PM. Espresso has some great coffee, a perfect atmosphere and is T-accessible. The idea was originally suggested in this thread: <a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=17711">http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=17711</a><p>Bring Friends, Co-Founders, whoever! Post with a little bit of information about yourself so we know who's coming!<p> -------------------------------------------------<p> Mod this comment up to keep it on top!
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17,969
17,969
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[ 18074, 18016, 18024 ]
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comment
ed
2007-04-30T00:53:06
null
Here we go!<p><a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=17969">http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=17969</a>
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figgy
2007-04-30T00:54:11
null
First, use a web designer, not a graphics/print designer. You won't regret it.<p>You can try sites like CreativeHotLink.com or Craigslist.org
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[ 17983 ]
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comment
lupin_sansei
2007-04-30T00:57:18
null
I just joined #news.yc on freenode
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[ 17996 ]
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comment
nostrademons
2007-04-30T01:01:37
null
It's not a bad article, but there's a particularly cringeworthy mistake in it:<p>"Another event that aided the growth of Reddit was a blog post about Reddit changing the Reddit site from LISP (originally created by Paul Graham) to Python."<p>Oh? McCarthy might have something to say about that... ;-)
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story
Sam_Odio
2007-04-30T01:05:46
Ruby howto for business majors (and 13 yr. olds)
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http://hacketyhack.net/
13
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17,977
4
[ 17990, 18114, 18126 ]
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comment
rms
2007-04-30T01:12:11
null
It's telling that the "comment" link for this essay goes here and no longer to Reddit.
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17,947
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[ 17985, 17986, 24603 ]
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pg
2007-04-30T01:13:21
null
This article gets a few things right and a few dramatically wrong. Besides the obvious howler that I invented Lisp, the major mistakes are:<p>1. That the controversy over switching from Lisp to Python was a "turning point" for Reddit's traffic. Such a minor controversy wouldn't have generated sustained traffic. And indeed when you look at Reddit's lifetime traffic graph, there aren't any visible inflection points; it is overall a pretty smooth upward curve.<p>2. The reason Digg got more traffic was not some subtle difference in SEO strategies, but simply that (1) they started several months earlier, and (2) they promoted the site energetically to their enormous core audience of 15 year old gamers.<p>3. The reason it seems from talking to the Reddit founders that "success was not so difficult" is that Steve and Alexis are such understated guys. Simple design always looks like it was easy. Actually they worked quite hard.
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[ 18062, 18017 ]
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story
Alex3917
2007-04-30T01:16:43
Double your userbase with two lines of code and a box of Modafinil
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http://alexkrupp.typepad.com/sensemaking/2007/04/double_your_use.html
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22
[ 18028, 18366, 18178, 18752 ]
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comment
chandrab
2007-04-30T01:17:07
null
Damn...It's my birthday and I won't be in town that day! Is there another potential meetup next month (June?)
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[ 17982 ]
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comment
ed
2007-04-30T01:23:00
null
Haven't discussed it but if this goes well I'd like to see it become a monthly thing.
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waleedka
2007-04-30T01:23:38
null
That's what I meant. Corrected the title.
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waleedka
2007-04-30T01:30:20
null
Their web site looks nice, but they seem expensive!!! What's "Low Cost" to you? Ballpark figure? I know some companies charge thousands of dollars, and that's beyond my budget.
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ecuzzillo
2007-04-30T01:33:15
null
That might be bad; it means that this community will grow in the same way as Reddit did. Which was fine for a while, and maybe it'll be fine here because the powers that be here are less religious about not messing with the content.
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[ 17992 ]
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comment
byrneseyeview
2007-04-30T01:36:36
null
Since a social network's value increases at something approaching the square of the growth rate in users [1], it makes sense for wealthy backers to be active participants early on -- which is probably why Peter Thiel has a LinkedIn profile and Tom updates his Myspace.<p>[1] And a user's incentive to join correlates with the average desirability of other users, in terms of whatever the network focuses on. Link-finding ability for reddit, popularity for Facebook/Myspace, sexual attractiveness for dating sites, disposable income for business networking sites, etc.
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comment
Cthulhu
2007-04-30T01:42:34
null
Hopefully not to many.
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comment
ed
2007-04-30T01:48:53
null
MY INFO:<p>I'm currently working on <a href="http://www.PhotoFlock.com">http://www.PhotoFlock.com</a> - a fairly standard photo upload site which offers similar functionality to imageshack.us (with a few web 2.0 extras). This summer I will be aggressively expanding the operations of the site to create a UGC destination with some innovative premium services. I didn't apply to YC and will be bootstrapping development for the next few months.<p> For the last year, I was involved with <a href="http://www.SciLink.com">http://www.SciLink.com</a> where I was a co-founder and the principal designer. SciLink is a social network for life-science professionals which integrates journal article data. I recently left the company to focus on finishing school and also to explore the viability of my current project.
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jmw
2007-04-30T01:56:20
null
I'm in.<p>I'm co-founder of a YCombinator startup that hasn't gone public yet. I'm also an MIT student that's living in Boston until at least the end of the summer.<p>Anyone who's interested in startups/hacking should come. I suggest bringing something to hack on or get feedback on (I'm probably going to be working in Espresso Royale that day).
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Sam_Odio
2007-04-30T02:00:11
null
As a business major trying to learn how to program(gasp), I found this to be a useful guide to the basics of ruby.<p>Unfortunately, the software only runs on windows. Here's a direct link to the download page: <a href="http://code.whytheluckystiff.net/hacketyhack/wiki/GetHacketyHack">http://code.whytheluckystiff.net/hacketyhack/wiki/GetHacketyHack</a> <p>
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[ 18021 ]
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jmw
2007-04-30T02:03:52
null
I think it'd be interesting to hear how teams of founders work. What kinds of team dynamics they have - things like:<p>democratic vs. dictatorship 1 technical & 1 business ...etc<p>Woz and Jobs Hewlett and Packard Allen and Gates Sergey and Larry ...
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pg
2007-04-30T02:05:26
null
We're determined to keep the site focused, however many users we get. We kill submissions that are egregiously off-topic.
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[ 18008, 18001, 18009 ]
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comment
dummypointer
2007-04-30T02:07:12
null
I think it is a good idea ! It would be a great opportunity for those who are looking for great hackers or great ideas. Why don't we form a "Boston/Cambridge Young Entrepreneurs Club"? We could have monthly meetings, reviews of our demo products and sharing knowledge/experiences. We could also discuss different successful start ups, fund raising issues...sort of our own small Start Up school - by Entrepreneurs for Entrepreneurs ! Those who are successful founders in the area can also tell their stories and share their experiences. We could extend this idea to the next level by having investors to give us talks if possible. Any suggestions/issues?
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[ 18000, 18025 ]
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create_account
2007-04-30T02:13:54
null
Future investors <i>hate</i> the idea of IP conflict like this.<p>If the accusation is public knowledge, she'll have a difficult time raising a second round.
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Goladus
2007-04-30T02:20:29
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"If only Paul Graham could have been writing 10 years ago instead of starting a company ;)"<p>Seriously... When I used Lisp in college I remember thinking that it felt like cheating. It felt like using a graphing calculator to solve polynomials in high school. The only other languages I'd used in class were C, C++, Java, and 68K assembler, and it was hard to shake the idea that serious programming was supposed to be painful and low-level.
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jey
2007-04-30T02:22:21
null
There's already 10-15 people who have been visiting the EFnet channel. There's currently 10 people there, and it's been fairly active over the last couple days.
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brett
2007-04-30T02:28:19
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How is that a design firm? From their homepage: <i>MonVia is a business and technology accelerator built by entrepreneurs for entrepreneurs.</i><p>And the "What we do" page only mentions design in passing: <a href="http://monvia.com/whatwedo.html">http://monvia.com/whatwedo.html</a><p>Given what they claim to do, who frequents news.yc, the fact that this is your only comment (or post) and how out of context this recommendation seems to be, you're setting off some serious spam flags. Assuming you deserve the benefit of the doubt : Care to clarify or point us to their web design wing?
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nostrademons
2007-04-30T02:28:33
null
I'm in. I'll float the idea by my cofounder too and see if he wants to come.
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story
lupin_sansei
2007-04-30T02:29:08
(Funny) Java Programmers wanted
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http://www.hupi.ch/FunStuff/Schwachsinn/IndianTrain2.jpg
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