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18,100
story
gibsonf1
2007-04-30T13:45:52
EarthLink rethinking muni Wi-Fi?
null
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/sfgate/detail?blogid=19&entry_id=15880
1
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story
gibsonf1
2007-04-30T13:46:24
Lifting the lid on government with Google
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http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/sfgate/detail?blogid=19&entry_id=15973
1
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18,101
0
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story
gibsonf1
2007-04-30T13:47:51
Using the Web to navigate California freeway collapse
null
http://www.webware.com/8301-1_109-9713810-2.html?tag=blog
1
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18,102
0
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18,103
story
Sam_Odio
2007-04-30T13:49:04
TechCrunch coverage of Yahoo/Right Media acquisition
null
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/04/29/panama-not-enough-to-battle-google-yahoo-acquires-rightmedia/
2
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18,103
0
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18,104
story
Sam_Odio
2007-04-30T13:49:21
And you thought all the good domain names were taken?
null
http://paulbuchheit.blogspot.com/2007/04/and-you-thought-all-good-domain-names.html
8
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story
jagrine
2007-04-30T13:59:27
Go BIG Launches 'Projects' Posting Service
null
http://www.gobignetwork.com/wil/2007/4/30/go-big-network-launches-service-to-help-entrepreneurs-find-talent-for-startup-companies/10142/view.aspx
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18,106
comment
ricky_clarkson
2007-04-30T13:59:30
null
I am new. I'm from Manchester, England, and I write a network simulator in Java. I'm mainly interested in Lisp at the moment, and its potential for children and for embedding into existing applications, such as media players.
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Sam_Odio
2007-04-30T14:04:26
More about Xobni financing
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http://www.bizjournals.com/masshightech/stories/2007/04/30/story16.html
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comment
uuilly
2007-04-30T14:31:12
null
Without even reading anything about it, they lost me w/ the "Ayn Rand character in a tie" logo.
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comment
wschroter
2007-04-30T14:37:51
null
the logo rocks. you're a communist. ;)
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[ 18179 ]
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jkush
2007-04-30T14:38:52
null
Nice. I just registed Ycombin8r.com
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[ 18183 ]
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story
danw
2007-04-30T14:39:11
Blinded by the Apple iPod
null
http://bokardo.com/archives/blinded-by-the-apple-ipod/
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dmarques1
2007-04-30T14:51:15
WSJ: Tech entrepreneurs looking for seed money have more places to turn these days
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dmarques1
2007-04-30T14:51:48
null
Article is titled, "Early Options: Tech Entrepreneurs looking for seed money have more places to turn these days."<p>Not sure where to find a public copy on the web?
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dmarques1
2007-04-30T14:56:03
null
I am also a business folk (Babson College Entrepreneurship program) and using Hackety Hack to try and gain some basic Ruby knowledge. I like it so far.
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comment
brlewis
2007-04-30T14:57:13
null
Nobody is using ourdoings.com because it's written in Scheme. They use it because they're busy with activities that lend themselves to photography (e.g. traveling or raising kids), and they don't have a lot of time to share/organize. Lisp hacking is not a photogenic activity.<p>If you want to leverage a language for publicity, you need to pick something that hackers in that language would want to do.
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dmarques1
2007-04-30T15:07:00
null
I will probably attend and bring a co-founder of mine or two.<p>Background: Serial young entrepreneur and blogger based out of Babson College (about to graduate). Also started a venture development firm for young entrepreneurs to launch ventures cheaper and faster (Invenio Group), we are about four years old at this point and continue to grow and thrive.<p>Excited to attend!
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edgeztv
2007-04-30T15:07:42
null
I'll be there too. I've done some good hacking in that coffee house. They don't have free WiFi though :(
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[ 18150 ]
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transburgh
2007-04-30T15:07:50
null
I just read the article (I get the WSJ in the office). Nice mention, congrats!
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comment
byrneseyeview
2007-04-30T15:08:00
null
The Money Game Early Options Tech entrepreneurs looking for seed money have more places to turn these days By JACLYNE BADAL April 30, 2007; Page R6<p>The world of dot-com financing is changing, and entrepreneurs are reaping much of the benefit.<p>While the competition for deals remains stiff, investors and researchers say tech entrepreneurs looking for seed money have more varied options these days. Indeed, some investor groups and venture-capital firms are giving companies that are still in the concept stage faster access to modest amounts of cash, and asking for less equity in return.<p>Seed money -- used to turn an idea into reality -- is among the toughest financing to secure for tech-related start-ups. Banks and professional investors are frequently reluctant to jump in at such an early stage. The few entrepreneurs who manage to cut deals with venture-capital firms tend to give up huge chunks of equity, something a lot of founders want to avoid.<p>Easier Terms<p>But with the new approach -- driven in part by the falling cost of launching Internet start-ups -- some venture capitalists and so-called angel investors are writing smaller checks and issuing them faster, in return for either relatively small stakes upfront, or convertible notes that can be turned into equity under certain future conditions.<p>Angel investors -- wealthy individuals who fund companies and tend to take a hands-off approach to day-to-day management -- were the largest source of funding at the seed and start-up stages last year, backing roughly 23,500 such ventures, according to the University of New Hampshire's Center for Venture Research. Jeffrey Sohl, director of the center, estimates that roughly 35% of the $25.6 billion in angel investments last year went to early-stage companies.<p>Dr. Sohl says some 46% of angel deals were at the seed or start-up stage, a proportion that the center expects could grow to as much as 55% in the next several years.<p>Venture capitalists, meanwhile, invested in more than 300 seed and start-up deals in 2006, up from 184 such deals in 2005, the center says.<p>"There's tons of money around, and if you can't find it, you're not ready to start a company," says Kenneth Morse, managing director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's MIT Entrepreneurship Center.<p>Tech Coast Angels Corp., a network of angel investors started in Irvine, Calif., recently launched a "seed track" funding program to get earlier access to companies. Candidates who look good on paper are invited to a screening session and have 30 minutes to sell their idea to about 10 angels, with half the time used to field questions. If investors are impressed, the entrepreneur can get a check the same night, or a few days later, in return for as much as 10% or so of the company, depending on valuation and check size.<p>The Tech Coast network also offers more traditional funding for entrepreneurs, but that route, because it usually involves bigger investments, can require about 500 hours of due diligence.<p>Checks for $25,000 to $100,000 in seed-track funding are common, says Tech Coast Angels founder Luis Villalobos. In some cases, the angels won't take equity upfront but will issue a convertible note, which would be turned into stock if the company later provided equity stakes in a formal funding round.<p>Quick Loans<p>On the venture-capital side, QuickStart Seed Funding Program at Charles River Ventures LLC, Menlo Park, Calif., offers loans of as much as $250,000 at 6% interest and takes no equity upfront. If the start-up does well and sells to venture capitalists, the debt -- plus interest -- converts to stock at a discount of as much as 25%. (A $250,000 loan, with interest factored in, would be worth up to $353,333 in stock a year later.) Entrepreneurs should note, however, that the firm wants to be an equal investor in any future funding round, so it could ultimately end up with a more traditional venture-capital-size stake in a company -- say, 20% or more.<p>Successful companies that never go for another round of funding but are bought out by another company, say, or go public, are expected to pay Charles River double the amount that they borrowed.<p>A Seattle-based start-up, BuddyTV.com, a discussion forum for television fans that also features original interviews with TV stars, is one of the first companies to get funding under the Charles River program. BuddyTV Corp. Chief Executive Andrew Liu says the $250,000 check came just five to seven weeks after his first meeting with Charles River.<p>The program was a "great thing for us because we didn't spend much time on fund raising and could focus on the execution," Mr. Liu says. The debt is currently outstanding. Mr. Liu hopes to have positive cash flow before trying for more funding for his company.<p>Seed-funding provider Y Combinator LLC, Mountain View, Calif., takes a slightly different approach. It gives out less cash than most seed-money investors -- a company with two founders gets a check for $15,000; one with three founders gets $20,000. But Y Combinator devotes more time to teaching young engineers with interesting ideas how to be entrepreneurs. About a dozen fledgling companies at a time attend 12-week programs in Mountain View or Cambridge, Mass., where experts speak at weekly dinners.<p>Then, at week 10, the start-ups make presentations to potential additional investors, with the last session drawing about 60 outsiders. Y Combinator usually ends up with about a 6% stake, but the range can be from 1% to 10%, depending on the company's initial valuation.<p>"It's much easier to get seed money than it used to be," says Paul Graham, a partner at Y Combinator. "Ten years ago a bunch of college kids starting a start-up had to go on hands and knees."<p>But seed funding is still by no means easy money. Mr. Graham says this year's winter session in Mountain View had 200 to 250 applicants, with the program accepting 13.<p>Charles River gets five to 10 submissions a day for its QuickStart program, but plans to fund only 10 start-ups this year, says George Zachary, a partner in the firm.<p>"If it takes us more than five minutes to understand what the product is, we are not going to fund it," Mr. Zachary advises.<p>Start-up hopefuls who don't get funding right away sometimes need to improvise until they do find capital. Some venture-capital firms, like Highland Capital Partners LLC in Lexington, Mass., will give free or reduced-rate office space to start-ups that they like but aren't ready to fund. This allows the start-up to work side-by-side with other entrepreneurs and investors. Almost the entire first floor of Highland's Lexington office is devoted to Highland-backed start-ups, says Highland Managing General Partner Paul Maeder.<p>Technical Help<p>Alternatively, entrepreneurs can recruit engineers and other experts to the team in an effort to do as much as possible without outside investment.<p>Daniel Marques couldn't get funding for his first Internet business, started as a freshman at Babson College, Babson Park, Mass. So he and his partner brought in a third person to help with the technical aspect. The trio kept expenses low and eventually gained positive cash flow and attracted an angel offer.<p>Finding the first risk-taker can be difficult, says the 22-year-old Mr. Marques, "but a lot of people want to be the second."<p>No matter how successful a start-up is at attracting capital, New Hampshire's Mr. Sohl advises researching the investor before accepting any of the money. Venture capitalists or angels with even a small chunk of equity can become a problem if their plans for the company differ from the founder's plans.<p>Make sure your visions align, Dr. Sohl warns: "Due diligence is a two-way street."
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comment
pg
2007-04-30T15:13:13
null
Killed due to sockpuppet upvotes. Do that again and we will ban the site.
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comment
Sam_Odio
2007-04-30T15:15:59
null
Also uploaded to scribd: <a href="http://tinyurl.com/26tdz8">http://tinyurl.com/26tdz8</a>
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comment
whacked_new
2007-04-30T15:20:05
null
Intriguing comment by pg about New England investors lacking confidence. Anyone venture a guess to why, and how this will change (or not) in the next 18 months?<p>Culture is obviously important. If NE is conservative, there are other proclaimed tech "hotspots" that are ultra conservative when it comes to web business.
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[ 18141 ]
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story
Sam_Odio
2007-04-30T15:21:01
Web 2.0 Shows Signs Of Becoming Bubble 2.0
null
http://www.startupjournal.com/runbusiness/failure/20070423-dvorak.html
2
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0
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18,124
comment
Mistone
2007-04-30T15:21:13
null
great article - nice to see the "launch on the cheap, fail on the cheap, small investment" model is garnering so much press. Charels River and Y Com sure have reaped the rewards of taking a lead role in this new model. <p>
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story
sabat
2007-04-30T15:21:51
Acquisition Exit: it's not just Google & Yahoo
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comment
jamongkad
2007-04-30T15:23:43
null
I think this is good thing to do for the community. Is this open source? can we contribute to the lessons?
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comment
sabat
2007-04-30T15:30:40
null
Google and Yahoo are most startups' exit strategies, according to conventional wisdom. And now we've seen a few articles about how Google and Yahoo really aren't acquiring very many companies.<p><i>But Google and Yahoo are hardly the only companies that buy companies.</i><p>How about Amazon? Amazon buys companies, and is probably going to buy a lot more. Ebay. News Corp (Rupert Murdoch bought MySpace and wants to buy more). VeriSign. Cisco (it acquires small companies all the time!).<p>And it's not just the big boys. You don't necessarily need a serial acquirer -- for instant, stock site TheStreet bought out startup StockPickr. Private-but-successful startup Six Apart (Type Pad, Moveable Type, for those of you who've been asleep) bought out LiveJournal.<p>This post isn't just a retort to the "better find another exit strategy" meme.<p><i>What other companies do acquisitions?</i> I suspect I've barely scratched the surface here.
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avibryant
2007-04-30T15:31:14
null
In my experience with Seaside (which uses roughly the same technique), extremely well. There's a demo site at <a href="http://scriptaculous.seasidehosting.st/,">http://scriptaculous.seasidehosting.st/,</a> fwiw.
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comment
avibryant
2007-04-30T15:32:40
null
What particular problems are caused by the user being kept on one server?
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story
Sam_Odio
2007-04-30T15:33:19
Entrepreneurship in Silicon Valley During the Boom and Bust (interesting conclusions, see comments)
null
http://www.scribd.com/doc/41507/Entrepreneurship-in-Silicon-Valley-During-the-Boom-and-Bust-
2
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[ 18133 ]
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story
veritas
2007-04-30T15:33:29
GigaOM: Why Hollywood suddenly loves tech?
null
http://gigaom.com/2007/04/30/why-hollywood-suddenly-loves-tech/
2
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0
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comment
mynameishere
2007-04-30T15:33:51
null
I hear its COBOL replacement went open-source a while ago.
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comment
Sam_Odio
2007-04-30T15:34:04
null
This study had some interesting findings. For those of you who don't want to read the whole thing:<p> - <i>"Denver had the highest entrepreneurship rate at 0.45 percent. The comparison across MSAs reveals that Silicon Valley did not have one of the highest rates of entrepreneurship during the late 1990s."</i><p>- <i>"The rest of California and several large MSAs had higher rates of entrepreneurship than Silicon Valley during the late 1990s."</i> <p>- <i>"During the post boom period, entrepreneurship rates were higher in all but one year [as compared to the boom period]."</i> The paper hypothesizes that the boom "suppressed" entrepreneurship in the Valley during the 90s.<p>- <i>"Entrepreneurship rates in Silicon Valley increased from 0.31 percent in the period of strong economic growth in the late 1990s to 0.35 percent in the post-boom period of the early to mid 2000s."</i>
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[ 18144 ]
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story
veritas
2007-04-30T15:34:10
YouTube Launches Active Share
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http://mashable.com/2007/04/30/youtube-active-share/
3
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[ 18189 ]
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comment
omouse
2007-04-30T15:37:41
null
zing!
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comment
dpapathanasiou
2007-04-30T15:37:44
null
These deals do happen all the time, but you don't hear about most of them because they're not in the sexy (<i>resisting urge to say bottom joke</i>) Web 2.0/social networking space.<p>Instead, they tend to happen in more boring (but profitable) areas like accounting or security software.<p>This site (a boutique broker specializing in software acquisitions) has a list of recent M&A deals along those lines: <a href="http://corumgroup.com/CorumTransactions.asp">http://corumgroup.com/CorumTransactions.asp</a>
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comment
boris
2007-04-30T15:39:23
null
I remember a few years ago Paul was proclaiming that as the cost of starting a company keeps going down, VCs will become extinct. It is interesting to see how the perspective is changing. Now Paul says you need investors to gain advantage over competition even though, oftentimes, a startup needs very little to make a product that people want.
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comment
Alex3917
2007-04-30T15:52:32
null
Who pays $2,000 just to have a chance to pitch angel investors? That's insane.
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[ 18195 ]
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story
veritas
2007-04-30T15:54:39
SplashCast Expands Media Player
null
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/04/30/splashcast-plays-itunes-and-beyond/
1
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18,139
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comment
ced
2007-04-30T15:57:24
null
I've been doing programming in science for 3 years now, and Fortran is a huge, huge problem. Fortran is too much like C, and think about how good C is for writing differential equations. There are tons of potential bugs in the programs I see, and very few opportunities to check for correctness. Development time takes an order of magnitude longer than it should. I've argued with physicists many times over this, and the issues they bring up are always:<p>- Alternatives are too slow<p>- I have a huge code base that I don't want to port over.<p>- I don't need (eg.) closures. If I ever designed a program that needed them, I wouldn't choose Fortran, but that has never happened<p>- (most popular) Programming is just a tool. I'm interested in the physic, not programming, and Fortran is Good Enough<p>I don't know if Fortress will succeed. I hope it does, but unless they can show that Fortress programs are both shorter <i>and</i> faster, I don't think it will happen. Mathematica, Matlab and IDL already have too much of a lock on the market for 'inefficient' computing.<p>My money is on a Mathematica clone eventually becoming faster than Fortran. It should happen.
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aston
2007-04-30T16:01:56
null
The recent trend seems to be that SFP kids live and work in Cambridge for the summer, then move out to the valley right after the program's done. <p>If Cambridge/Boston investors aren't helping folks take their ideas to the next level, why do the program on the east coast at all? Mountain View's got nice weather year-round.
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comment
nabeel
2007-04-30T16:03:48
null
Will be there. There is also the weekly OpenCoffee in Cambridge that does have free WiFi and a mix of VCs and entrepreneurs. ( <a href="http://boston.going.com/event-122245">http://boston.going.com/event-122245</a> )
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create_account
2007-04-30T16:03:57
null
That's exactly what I thought, too.<p>If Graham really feels that way about the East Coast investors (and especially if he says so publically), he might as well make California the permanent YC home.
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create_account
2007-04-30T16:04:48
null
<i>For those of you who don't want to read the whole thing</i><p>Yes, thank you.
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comment
mojuba
2007-04-30T16:06:06
null
From the web site's perspective, karma is a mechanism for internal calculations, and is in no way a measurement of your intellect or morality (?) or whatever else. And karma can't be turned into money for you, so why bother at all? :)<p>That's why a possibility of being downvoted never stopped me from commenting, be it reddit, slashdot, or YCnews.<p>One lesson that I learned from reddit in particular, is that if you are interested in the topic, you should read all comments, all the way down the page, because there might be something there, in the negative karma area.
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[ 18339, 18414 ]
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comment
SwellJoe
2007-04-30T16:08:26
null
I've had poor luck with elance. The quality just hasn't been very high.
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comment
mojuba
2007-04-30T16:08:49
null
... and besides, I believe the karma system can be greatly improved by taking into account sub-comments.
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comment
ced
2007-04-30T16:11:32
null
From the FAQ: <a href="http://research.sun.com/projects/plrg/Fortress/faq.html">http://research.sun.com/projects/plrg/Fortress/faq.html</a><p>"As a result, we are able to support features in Fortress such as transactions, specification of locality, and implicit parallel computation, as integral features built into the core of the language."<p>"Moreover, Fortress has been designed with the intent that it be a ``growable'' language, gracefully supporting the addition of future language features. In fact, much of the Fortress language itself (even the definition of arrays and other basic types) is encoded in libraries atop a relatively small core language."<p>I haven't looked at the details of Fortress yet, but I don't read 'Java' in the above quotes.
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sbraford
2007-04-30T16:12:32
null
the jetpacked guy invited me to do a guest post on his blog - why not share some news.YC goodness with his readership? =)
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ed
2007-04-30T16:18:47
null
Yep, this is true.<p>If I recall correctly, their access rates are very low. Most of us should be able to get through the night spending less than $10 ($4 for a drink, $6 for internet).
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SwellJoe
2007-04-30T16:19:58
null
I've noticed this, too.<p>Wufoo are famously good, and Kevin does all of that work. SocialMoth/Overhear.us have awesome design and Evan does everything. iminlikewithyou.com is tasty (if a bit overly pretty), and I believe they do it in-house, as well. Reddit is great and clean, and Alexis and Steve designed it. <p>Everyone is swayed by a nice clean design, even technically savvy folks like YC (they also know that a good design can make a good product great, and with bad design the best product will probably fail--MySpace being an obvious and baffling exception to that rule).
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kmt
2007-04-30T16:29:57
null
That might mean that PG (and the other YC folks) would have to move as well. AFAICT, YC wants to be close to the founders for physical meetings. It might not be easy for YC folks to move (they have their lives, etc.).<p>Also, Boston is a niche: it is home to some bright tech people. YC is close to them, while the valley is away, so YC is the obvious choice for Boston students. That gives YC a competitive advantage at least in the area and makes it distinct. Moving to the valley would make YC more generic and less of a brand.
null
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18,143
18,107
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[ 18187 ]
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sbraford
2007-04-30T16:33:40
Do It Now (annoying ads; good content)
null
http://www.stevepavlina.com/articles/do-it-now.htm
5
null
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null
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18,154
story
sbraford
2007-04-30T16:34:07
The Art of Execution
null
http://blog.guykawasaki.com/2006/01/remember_the_sc.html
10
null
18,154
4
[ 18238, 18248, 18219 ]
null
null
18,155
story
sbraford
2007-04-30T16:39:30
Apple's Biggest Flop: The Lisa
null
http://www.obsoletecomputermuseum.org/lisa/
1
null
18,155
1
[ 18166 ]
null
null
18,156
story
usablecontent
2007-04-30T16:39:49
TargetSpot Targeting Online Radio Ads
null
http://startupmeme.com/2007/04/30/targetspot-targeting-online-radio-ads/
2
null
18,156
0
null
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sbraford
2007-04-30T16:47:02
Web 2.0 Lolcat
null
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ceonyc/473567640/
1
null
18,157
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comment
sbraford
2007-04-30T16:52:48
null
Certainly puts things in perspective.
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17,948
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18,159
story
schoudha
2007-04-30T17:11:03
Got Roomfuls of Stuff? Now Sites Will Help Keep Track of It
null
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/30/technology/30ecom.html?ex=1335585600&en=e83218ec96ade087&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss
5
null
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0
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null
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mojuba
2007-04-30T17:13:25
The Long Hallway: on building virtual companies
null
http://alistapart.com/articles/longhallway
7
null
18,160
0
null
null
null
18,161
comment
usablecontent
2007-04-30T17:16:53
null
I dont understand what the dead link means ? <p>I could still click on it and go to the site...
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18,120
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[ 18164 ]
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comment
waleedka
2007-04-30T17:19:06
null
Had a similar experience with elance. So how did you end up doing it? In house?
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17,938
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comment
pg
2007-04-30T17:19:15
null
The guy confuses the idea of an outlying data point, which is meaningless, with one at the far end of the curve, which is simply hard to replicate.<p>The iPod, like Michael Jordan, is the latter: a point worth aiming for, even if few make it all the way there.
null
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18,111
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comment
pg
2007-04-30T17:21:26
null
You have showdead set to yes. By default it's set to no, and then the link is invisible.
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comment
usablecontent
2007-04-30T17:27:02
null
Ok I got it now.
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comment
chandrab
2007-04-30T17:27:20
null
Very cool....I've got an Apple Lisa-1 sitting next to my..First TRS-80 Model III, Commodore PET 2001 (8K RAM), Atari 800, Apple II+, KIM-1...I keep one Lisa at work to show the newbie programmers at work what we have today existed back in 1982. The Lisa was away head of it's time (yet a huge financial failure for Apple) - 32 bit 68000 processor (5Mhz) - 1MB RAM (Very expensive for 1982) - Virtual Memory and Multitasking OS - Integrated Applications (btw it also has cut & paste) - Screen Saver (Dimmer really) - Intelligent Power-switch (Puts all your docs away before shutting itself off) - Twin read heads on the 5.25 Floppy for redundancy and speed (but non-standard) - Diagnostics in ROM - GUI Based Operating System (Mac's QuickDraw based on Lisa) - LisaNet networking built-in<p>Larry Tesler et al, you did an awesome job!
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18,155
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comment
usablecontent
2007-04-30T17:32:11
null
PG: you are really vigilant, honestly I have never seen more vigilance on an internet service.<p>Is it just you, or are there other people as well policing news.ycombinator ?<p>Keep up the good work
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story
usablecontent
2007-04-30T17:33:05
eBay Launches ToGo Widgets For Any Listing
null
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/04/30/ebay-launches-togo-widgets-for-any-listing/
2
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18,168
0
null
null
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story
usablecontent
2007-04-30T17:34:44
O'Reilly Radar: We'd Love To Hear Your S3 Stories...And Numbers
null
http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/04/wed_love_to_hea.html
3
null
18,169
0
null
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story
usablecontent
2007-04-30T17:37:00
Google Seeks Clearer Path to State Data - New York Times
null
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/30/technology/30data.html?ex=1335585600&en=4f3da1548f6e2489&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss
1
null
18,170
0
null
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comment
PhilipBaddeley
2007-04-30T17:42:00
null
Great essay. How about turning it into a "rich illustration" so everyone can see it and talk about it? Look at my site to see what Dill can achieve <a href="http://www.equityfingerprint.com/.">http://www.equityfingerprint.com/.</a> Anyone like the idea?
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17,947
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comment
danielha
2007-04-30T17:44:53
null
"Don't limit yourself to good ideas..."<p>Bravo, Paul, I almost choked on some water.
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18,104
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story
usablecontent
2007-04-30T17:45:45
Reuters Advances Development of Search Capability With The Acquisition of Clearforest (Apr. 30, 2007)
null
http://www.clearforest.com/whatsnew/PRs.asp?year=2007&id=109
1
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0
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comment
PhilipBaddeley
2007-04-30T17:47:01
null
Oh yes it can! It is called the Investor Agreement. A 10% shareholder or less can control the company if the terms are in the agreement. Most agreements are not publicly available so it is difficult to know what is going on when you compare deals. Have you ever made an angel investment and then regreted that you did not have more control? VCs have. It is like who wins in the end, it all depends on the x of the VC investment. It is not what it says on the can, it is what's inside that matters.
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17,947
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story
usablecontent
2007-04-30T17:49:23
Incentives Matter: Why Comments on Digg Are So Bad (Really Thought Provoking)
null
http://www.25hoursaday.com/weblog/PermaLink.aspx?guid=d722bf75-58a7-4e3a-8134-53ef6caeb007
2
null
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0
null
null
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18,176
story
nickanderson
2007-04-30T17:50:15
Masters of The Blogosphere: The 25 Most Influential Blogs
null
http://www.ebizmba.com/articles/most-popular-blogs.html
2
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[ 18177 ]
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comment
nickanderson
2007-04-30T17:50:28
null
The 25 most influential blogs ranked by a combination of Inbound Links, RSS Subscribers, Alexa Ranking and Compete and Quantcast traffic data. Finally, a ranking that uses multiple data streams to determine whose king of the hill in the blogosphere.
null
null
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18,178
comment
MobileDigit
2007-04-30T17:50:33
null
"if I were launching a new website, here's what I'd do. Instead of hiding the Feedback link in the upper right hand corner, I'd place a form right on the main page. A big form. And I'd bend over backwards to get people to use it."<p>What are the two lines of code to produce this?
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17,980
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null
[ 18186 ]
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18,179
comment
uuilly
2007-04-30T17:53:22
null
I actually like Ayn Rand a lot. But her heroes and people who start startups typically don't wear ties or pump their fists like Jimmy Connors. These guys clearly don't know their audience.
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null
18,109
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18,180
story
entrepreneur
2007-04-30T17:58:37
Maximize Your Self Concept for Business Success
null
http://mindfulentrepreneur.com/blog/2007/04/30/maximize-your-self-concept-for-business-success/
1
null
18,180
0
null
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comment
brlewis
2007-04-30T18:15:03
null
Even more interesting is that he reiterates the advantage of having investors in this essay, which also acknowledges the huge time-cost of funding. This implies that the benefits are worth this high cost. One could disappoint customers or fall behind competitors while engaged full-time in funding.
null
null
18,137
17,947
null
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18,182
comment
Tichy
2007-04-30T18:15:45
null
You just inspired me to register a universal domain: not.tv ;-)<p>Edit: Ok, universal for everything but TV - but TV is dead, so it's kind of universal.
null
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18,104
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comment
davidw
2007-04-30T18:17:11
null
null
null
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18,184
story
Readmore
2007-04-30T18:20:03
News.YC site advice - What do you think about the new Klipboardz look?
null
http://www.klipboardz.com
3
null
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[ 18252, 18196, 18209, 18198, 18251 ]
null
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18,185
story
brett
2007-04-30T18:21:37
Bloomberg.com: Supreme Court Clears Way for More Patent Challenges
null
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aHigP6BkC8pE&refer=home
1
null
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0
null
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comment
brlewis
2007-04-30T18:21:59
null
I'd like to know too. You could do something like the following, but that would mean an ugly email message and ugly thank-you page.<p>[(define-input feedback) (mail '("foo@bar") feedback)]Thank you for your input.
null
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18,178
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[ 18818, 18239 ]
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18,187
comment
jey
2007-04-30T18:26:23
null
<i>That might mean that PG (and the other YC folks) would have to move as well. AFAICT, YC wants to be close to the founders for physical meetings. It might not be easy for YC folks to move (they have their lives, etc.).</i><p>Willingness to move to the YC location is a precondition of being accepted into YC. I have to move from Mountain View CA to Cambridge MA for SFP... even though WFPs are held here, where I already live. But I'm not complaining at all; living in Boston for a while sounds great.
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18,107
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[ 18291 ]
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comment
byrneseyeview
2007-04-30T18:27:49
null
"This is actually why I left reddit. As the site grew, I became increasingly frustrated that anything I said contrary to popular opinion was mercilessly downvoted & derided, regardless of the actual quality of the comment."<p>I hadn't noticed this. In fact, I noticed the opposite -- that well-articulated comments taking controversial views still got upvoted. It was just a stricter quality filter. And anyway, it's easy to take advantage of reddit's predilections. A while ago, I read a great George Will column, and thought it deserved to be reddited. My headline was something like "Notorious Neocon George Will actually believes that..."<p>I left because it was getting boring and homogeneous.
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18,008
17,947
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18,189
comment
brett
2007-04-30T18:29:47
null
Does mashable.com hate their readers or something? Why don't you just put <i>all</i> your content below the fold?
null
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18,134
18,134
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18,190
comment
bsaunder
2007-04-30T18:31:54
null
Google's a big company with lots of brilliant people. It's hard to imagine any feature or technology they <i>couldn't</i> easily implement. For the rest of us, hopefully those smart people turn into (or remain) researchers don't start churning out products. Of course, that doesn't seem likely.<p>It does seem like applying technology to social networking is becoming a commodity. Not that there's not more to be done, but there are an aweful lot of me toos and simultaneously similar endeavors. Darwin would be happy.<p>I think the key to creating value it to look where other's aren't. Once enough smart people and companies are working on a problem, the value you can create by following everyone else is much more deminished. If all the great athletes were trying to become home run hitters, an up and coming athlete would have much better odds looking towards a slightly less popular sport in which to excel.<p>I think there are too many people trying to hit home runs at social networking. If you have a great (novel) idea, start swinging, if not, look for a different domain to create value, I think your odds will be better.<p>I think you are right that 3D interfaces are coming up next, but I'm not sure your approach is correct. As others have mentioned here, 3D in a browswer is probably not the way to go. The Croquet Project (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croquet_project)">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croquet_project)</a> look like they are on to something... and it's free and open source (I wonder how that will effect all those "about to launch" companies you mention). To have satisfactory 3D you want a local engine that works directly with the hardware (or such functionality integrated directly into the browser). But you seem to be disappointed in these options.<p>With regards to the low barrier to entry concern. Yeah, I see the same thing which is what has stopped me working on a few of my ideas (a couple of times a decision I regret). I think to a large extent this is due to the ever decreasing development times (open source and development efficiency), and more efficient sharing of ideas (blogs/tagging). This seems to be a structural change that will only get worse.<p>Original thinking definitely creates more value, but I'm not sure it's necessarily creates a higher barrier to entry. While everyone else is running the marathon, take the short cut (look where they aren't). It doesn't matter if you don't have a high barrier as long as you shock everyone with what you produce. It's winning the race that counts (launching a successful company), not trying to run faster than everyone else.
null
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17,900
17,889
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18,191
comment
mojuba
2007-04-30T18:32:22
null
Specific groups can be attracted to a site by a graphical look of a site alone. I think Digg vs. Reddit is exactly about that.<p>The only thing that I still don't get is excess of politics on Reddit. Maybe it's just those who are interested in politics have one thing in common with most geeks: the lack of artistic taste :)
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18,192
comment
mojuba
2007-04-30T18:37:25
null
<i>[Alexis Ohanian and Steve Huffman] were able to create the illusion of more contributors by submitting articles under different user names</i><p>I'm trying to imagine some entrepreneur who opens a new grocery store and asks his family members to go in and out the store all day long pretending they are customers :)
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17,968
17,968
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[ 19238 ]
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story
danw
2007-04-30T18:38:20
dupe
null
http://www.paulgraham.com/guidetoinvestors.html
2
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18,193
-1
null
null
true
18,194
comment
gibsonf1
2007-04-30T18:40:10
null
The perception occurred accurately for the creationist, but then the opinions based on that perception had to be woven into a strange hypothesis in an attempt to circumvent the obvious contradiction between the fact (the perceived fossil) and the mental model of creationism in the perceiver's head.<p>A person has to be pretty far gone when they have automatized evading perceptual evidence to such a degree that they are no longer able to be consciously aware of the contradiction between their beliefs and what they perceive. This kind of evasion can be seen in cults, extreme religious groups, extreme political groups, where extreme = evading perceptual evidence that disproves your held beliefs. Usually group pressure is involved to automatize the evasion.<p>Perception (and I've been using it in the strictly <i>integrated sensation</i> sense) is our link to reality that enables us to make sure that our mental models don't fall off the deep end. Evade perception at your own peril.
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17,674
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comment
juwo
2007-04-30T18:47:12
null
It reminds me of a pyramid scheme.
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18,112
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comment
Readmore
2007-04-30T18:50:30
null
I'm trying to position the site as a social news site where the submissions are more like actual news articles. They have a picture that draws in attention and then they reposition depending on how popular they are. What do you think?
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18,184
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[ 18216 ]
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comment
juwo
2007-04-30T18:51:19
null
:) thank you!<p>Now if someone would actually run the software...!
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comment
gibsonf1
2007-04-30T18:53:29
null
I tried to look, but the site must be overloaded - nothing displayed.
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18,184
18,184
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[ 18199 ]
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18,199
comment
Readmore
2007-04-30T18:56:48
null
It seems to be working. Give it another try.
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