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mae
2007-03-29T20:38:39
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Thank you
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jkush
2007-03-29T20:40:52
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I think what's important is that you agree on WHAT you will build. <p>
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mynameishere
2007-03-29T20:42:07
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I don't get it. Sign up, "bid" everything on one girl, if it doesn't work, close the account and repeat.<p>???<p>Easy to game, and I'm not sure why any woman would care two cents for some meaningless "bids" in contrast with _any_ real-world criteria.
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zkinion
2007-03-29T20:42:36
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I think theres plenty of people out there who want to be part of a startup, but hav no idea whatsoever, or have just vague/pipe dream ideas about starting a company. <p>Right now I just need a really good flash developer, and maybe another super tech if they could contribute alot. I haven't been able to find one yet, but still have a few leads..
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vo0do0
2007-03-29T20:44:30
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hehe lol, that's a good topic! I've been married for past 4 years (almost five, and I'll be at ycomb when we're 5 years - hopefully) and what I can say is:<p>My wife's paying the bills right now while iJigg is giving me 12 hours of work and big headaches :D<p>I'd not say you shouldn't try something being married, but for sure you need a good conversation with your wife before you start.<p>Tell her what are you going to do, the risks and the gifts you'll be able to give to her if you make it thru.<p>Tell her that you'll give her the first 3 months of incoming, that will help.<p>btw, my wife's pregnant and our incoming isn't enough anymore what tells me to rush even more on iJigg.<p>Dreams are priceless, but when married you're not alone anymore, you need to share everything with your wife!
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domp
2007-03-29T20:45:31
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Well I'd assume that a company would already be far along with development and brainstorming if they're looking for publicity like this. All they are expecting is pretty much a sales pitch, which a startup is probably already used to giving anyways. If not, videotaping yourself in such a way might be more important then developing or brainstorming.
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nickb
2007-03-29T20:46:57
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He definitely got rich! No idea if she regretted it... I never asked him about that. I think he remarried.
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scrollinondubs
2007-03-29T20:47:08
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jackpipe- yea we know that page is admittedly weak right now ;-) we're replacing the about page with a distilled 5-point tour that explains the concept better and more visually. RE: the vanilla preconfigured stacks- the VirtualAppliances.net guys and Spike Source are doing a pretty good job now with putting out lean versions of the basic software stacks so we're targeting the end-to-end apps for now. We'll hit those up down the road though. thanks for the feedback.<p>sean
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domp
2007-03-29T20:48:03
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They seem to just be looking for you to present your company in a creative way.
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Readmore
2007-03-29T20:49:32
Yahoo! Pipes and the web as a database
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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/yahoo_pipes_web_database.php
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[ 7421, 7413 ]
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sanj
2007-03-29T20:49:46
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Does the fact that LLCs do not have shares imply that each member will know the ownership of every other partner?<p>Or is there a way to keep that private?
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nickb
2007-03-29T20:51:48
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They're just overlaying sprites (stars in this case) in areas of high deltas (changes). That's all.
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eli
2007-03-29T20:59:44
Ethnography: stalking your user (legally) - A List Apart
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http://alistapart.com/articles/culturalprobe
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eli
2007-03-29T21:01:20
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I bet Google really wishes they thought of pipes (to go with Google Base).<p>(Note: Google Base is one of the potential data sources in Pipes)
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domp
2007-03-29T21:02:51
Scrapblog: Scrapbook maker
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http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/29/the-real-scrapblog-is-here-finally/
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zaidf
2007-03-29T21:03:12
null
I don't know of what use it is to guess the "likelihood" of something such as this.<p>The way it works with us is I usually make the technical decisions with my tech partner in my mind. Yes there are times we run into disagreements but they are discussed and resolved UNLESS you make disagreements a personal thing in which case you might as well part ways with your team.
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domp
2007-03-29T21:03:47
Craig Newmark on Net Neutrality
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http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/345-craig-keep-the-internet-neutral-fair-and-free
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dfranke
2007-03-29T21:06:02
null
Math is hard. I have about as much formal education in math as I do in CS (about to finish undergrad as a double major). Yet I can pick up nearly any CS research paper and breeze through it, but my eyes will glaze over at 90% of math research.
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amichail
2007-03-29T21:11:20
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Yes, math is hard and successful academics in the field are super smart. And yes, mathematical ability declines with age.<p>However, I don't see that math is really all that important for 99% of web 2.0 startups.
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ecuzzillo
2007-03-29T21:12:24
null
Yeah, but don't you think it's more important to care about people having points than people being asses? I'd certainly rather live in a place where everybody had a point but was an ass than where nobody was an ass but also had no points. (similarity to places real or imagined entirely coincidental)
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eli
2007-03-29T21:12:28
null
direct link: <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/06/09/newmark.internet/index.html">http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/06/09/newmark.internet/index.html</a><p>It's a good read, but it's from last year.
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Readmore
2007-03-29T21:16:00
null
This is a really interesting idea, it would be cool to have an API for pipes but I supposed you could really do the same thing locally by just scraping the data sources. I'm pretty excited to play around with this.
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far33d
2007-03-29T21:24:29
null
it would be cool if the sprites had some ballistic motion after they were spawned... with velocity based on the initial direction of the delta that spawned the sprite + some gravity, maybe some turbulence and random lifespans and size changes. <p>I've had too many years making particle effects....
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dfranke
2007-03-29T21:28:57
null
I don't think the OP meant specifically that math is important, just that the same energy that makes young people better at math also makes them better at startups.
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amichail
2007-03-29T21:35:15
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Very few people are good at math. You need more than energy and enthusiasm to succeed in that field.<p>Anyway, older people bring critical skills to a startup such as creativity, which can improve over time as you try and observe all sorts of ideas.
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Readmore
2007-03-29T21:37:13
Stephen King's 'On Writing' applies to software as well
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http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/322-excerpts-from-stephen-kings-on-writing#extended
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paul
2007-03-29T21:38:39
null
They were part of the 06 SFP in Boston and went back to NYC at the end of the summer.
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RyanGWU82
2007-03-29T21:42:55
null
Well, I'm at Stanford, which is a good part of why it's been so great. Before Startup School, I hadn't had the balls to apply to particulary competitive schools. (I was previously thinking of getting a master's in IT management from a local school. It's a good program if I wanted to be a contractor, but not when I really wanted to be in the software industry.)<p>Stanford is in the heart of Silicon Valley, which is a big part of why this has been so great. There are an unusual number of opportunities related to tech business because of that. The other schools in this area, like Santa Clara U. and San Jose State, also have great access to the tech industry. And even if I wasn't in school, it would have been wise just to move to this area.<p>At Stanford, I've also met a lot of smart and motivated people, both professors and students. I'm learning a TON in my classes, honestly they're far more interesting and useful than I would have guessed. I stumbled upon co-founders for a startup, and I've gotten the opportunity to TA for a great professor. It's all been a <i>ton</i> of work, and I'm honestly kinda burnt out, but nonetheless I'm really glad I'm here.
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cwilbur
2007-03-29T21:44:10
null
The problem with enterprise software (at least as I understand it) is that it's frequently bespoke data processing software, written in-house -- it's not the sort of thing that you can do once and sell to multiple clients, it's the sort of thing that needs to be customized for each client.<p>I think that it has the potential to be the most interesting software to work on, because a lot of it is about real things, but because of its bespoke nature the only way to get at the really interesting bits is to work for the company that it forms part of the infrastructure for. And once you're in that situation, you're dependent on (probably very risk-averse) management for support for doing "smart" things with the software.<p>
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RyanGWU82
2007-03-29T21:52:05
null
Paul, on Saturday, you discussed YC's 100% satisfaction rating from the founders you've sponsored. I can't imagine that's true for <i>all</i> (non-YC) startups, but I bet it's still extremely high. I hope you do become more comfortable with this, because there are a bunch of us that are living much more inspired lives, and trace part of that inspiration back to you. I'd hate to see you shy away from this because you're nervous about the outcome.<p>(Fortunately, I don't see any signs that you're actually too concerned. "Why to Not Not Start a Startup" couldn't have come from someone who's wavering!)
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zaidf
2007-03-29T22:00:50
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If the link comes broken for you, use this: <a href="http://www.slideshare.net/zaidf/how-i-sold-my-idea-to-my-cofounders">http://www.slideshare.net/zaidf/how-i-sold-my-idea-to-my-cofounders</a>
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domp
2007-03-29T22:03:06
null
I just want to say that this program is nuts. You can get started without being signed up so I'd say try it out. It's pretty impressive and I'm almost positive that it's built with Adobe Flex. Runs a lot like a desktop application. I've been waiting to see a good use for Flex.
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dfranke
2007-03-29T22:03:20
null
Sigh. The sum of the scores on my four comments is now 6 and yesterday it was 3 (should always be 4). Apparently this is a bad idea.
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Elfan
2007-03-29T22:03:23
null
I'm a CS major but by the time I'll graduate I'll have taken more math than CS courses (degree requirements are funny that way). I would tend to agree with you about the relative difficulty if CS and math but this could be partially a consequence of how it is taught. If some school was crazy enough to offer a "real" (see Dijkstra[1]) program that would compare more favorably.<p>But this sort of proves the original point. Since cs/programming has lower barriers to entry (cool new stuff is still "easy") there are many more opportunities for young people.<p>[1] <a href="http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/EWD/transcriptions/EWD10xx/EWD1036.html">http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/EWD/transcriptions/EWD10xx/EWD1036.html</a>
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Elfan
2007-03-29T22:05:20
null
Unless I missed a subtlety he meant "smart" as in intelligent. He later clarified that one should never compromise intelligence for experience when hiring.
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amichail
2007-03-29T22:09:33
null
Intelligent along what dimension(s)? Or is he a believer in the g factor?
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Elfan
2007-03-29T22:28:19
null
He didn't specify. <p>Notes: <a href="http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dczgjp36_7c78dgn">http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dczgjp36_7c78dgn</a>
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dhouston
2007-03-29T22:33:20
null
right -- but if your employment docs say, for example, that your employer owns all IP you create <i>including</i> stuff you do on your own time and out of the office (yes, a draconian clause, but not that uncommon!), you can be in big trouble if your startup takes off and your former employer is legally entitled to (i.e. you don't own) the IP you created -- either your employer can try to lay claim to what you've built or your investors/acquirer will find out during the due diligence process and not move forward as a result.<p>that said, i'm not a lawyer, and i'm sure others can provide related nightmare stories -- but everything i've heard indicates it's really better to not screw around, and to have a paper trail indicating that you own your IP.<p>-drew
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divia
2007-03-29T22:53:14
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comment
divia
2007-03-29T22:53:58
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I'd love one too if you still have any left you'd be willing to give out. (I'll throw it out there that I'm female, in case that makes it any more likely you'll give me one :-). I'm willing to bet most people here aren't.)<p>diviam at gmail
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dfranke
2007-03-29T22:54:27
null
I don't understand the relevance of your point about CS curricula. My comparison was with respect to my ability to read research papers written by professors, not to do classwork at my current level. I'm observing that math papers are much more difficult to understand and inferring that the state of the art in math is more complex than the state of the art in computer science.
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story
python_kiss
2007-03-29T23:11:21
Joel Spolsky: The famous blogger on software productivity (Video)
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http://www.podtech.net/scobleshow/technology/1414/joel-spolsky-the-famous-blogger-on-software-productivity
1
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story
domp
2007-03-29T23:24:50
Silicon Valley's middle class
null
http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSN2922018620070329
1
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0
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comment
zkinion
2007-03-29T23:26:03
null
oohhhhhhhhhhh 100th comment :)
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story
bctaner
2007-03-29T23:44:49
My Own Successful Startup Story ... In 1984 Mar
null
http://codist.biit.com/fiche/thecodist/article/my-own-successful-startup-story--in-1984
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comment
BrandonM
2007-03-29T23:54:36
null
Wow... that was an amazing article, one of the best that I have read in a while. It really gave a lot of insight into social interactions, and not just online ones. Thanks for the link.<p>Someone mentioned Reddit, and I was thinking exactly the same thing, myself. Of course, Reddit at least does include many of the mechanisms suggested in the article, but there is one glaring omission: established users do not seem to have much more power than non-established ones. Perhaps users with more karma should have more weight when voting certain entries up or down. Just a thought...
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whacked_new
2007-03-29T23:58:58
null
I think it is dangerous to expect a cofounder to be a yes-man. You are probably better off without a cofounder at all. I'd imagine a good partner would complement your ability, and provide interpretation from a different angle.
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Elfan
2007-03-30T00:03:54
null
It was partially a tangent prompted by your comment. I meant "the stuff CS people do and think about" not just homework or research. Through whatever accidents of history, practical concerns, or being a young field, the stuff CS people do tends to be easier than the stuff math people do, but that doesn't necessarily need to be the case.
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nr
2007-03-30T00:04:39
null
are these available to download as mp3s?
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story
Elfan
2007-03-30T00:11:28
Ruining the User Experience with AJAX
null
http://www.alistapart.com/articles/ruininguserexperience
11
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[ 7471, 7507, 7458, 7466, 7485 ]
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Elfan
2007-03-30T00:16:52
Google Code Review
null
http://community.livejournal.com/evan_tech/221200.html?thread=1327888
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[ 7474 ]
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comment
BrandonM
2007-03-30T00:20:37
null
Great article which reiterates the point that even a failed startup can be a great experience. It is also an important reminder that the best software does not always (or even often) win out, so it is important to consider other issues when working on your product. It also demonstrates that a failure does not necessarily indicate a lack of ability or innovativeness on your part, but perhaps simply a small oversight or an inability to overcome inertia.
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comment
staunch
2007-03-30T00:37:21
null
Your slides made me think you don't realize how small a niche you're targeting. Thankfully it's the internet, where even a relatively small niche can get pretty huge.<p>Don't listen to the Perl naysayers. There's amazing productivity to be had with it, if you can deal with it not being "cool" these days. I'd recommend checking out Catalyst ( <a href="http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/">http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/</a> ) and DBIx::Class (CPAN) if you haven't.
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danielha
2007-03-30T01:04:39
How much are the "Web 2.0" offerings cutting into our productivity?
null
http://webworkerdaily.com/2007/03/29/the-two-edged-sword-of-web-20/
1
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0
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story
zach
2007-03-30T01:08:11
"Tongue in cheek" icons for your web app in progress
null
http://blog.caboo.se/articles/2007/3/29/tongue-in-cheek-goes-to-1-1
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1
[ 7468 ]
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story
danielha
2007-03-30T01:08:58
Justin.TV Guide: Highlights and lowlights
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http://justintvguide.blogspot.com/
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story
danielha
2007-03-30T01:09:33
Make Money With Twitter! 5 Monetization Models
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http://www.techquilashots.com/2007/03/29/make-money-with-twitter-5-monetization-models/
1
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7,456
0
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comment
nurall
2007-03-30T01:13:40
null
Its a tradeoff one has to live with. All of us lead parallel lives. You needn't be the same person in both the worlds. You play different roles, at times they are totally tangential, hence the problem.<p>Someone said this to me once, "if your professional life kicks ass... u r taking a beating in the personal front." Its not a universal rule, but I am sure a lot of people can relate to it.<p>Rather than cribbing about having to make a compromise. I think the best bet is to involve your partners as much as possible in discussions about your venture so that they know how important this is for you and how it is in the best interests of the relationship. Go ahead and ask your spouse for suggestions/feedback and keep her in the loop, never leave her in the dark. Share your vision with her. If she does share your vision, then she is going to support you 100%. Then it becomes a non-issue. Its easier said than done, but definitely worth a shot. I am sure Guy would agree with this approach. <p>In short - "Try to establish a mutually benefitting connection between the two parallel lives."
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zhyder
2007-03-30T01:15:45
null
While I agree AJAX apps should gracefully degrade when Javascript is disabled, I personally like the (Javascript-enabled) UI at Lala.com. I'm not sure I agree every service must be accessible everywhere. <p>It depends on the app. I'd really like to be able to check my Gmail and calendar on my cell phone. But I won't mind if I can't load Youtube or Flickr. <p>Know your target audience.
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story
bootload
2007-03-30T01:19:13
Science of Business: serial entrepreneurs share qualities with street kids?
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http://www.abc.net.au/catalyst/stories/s1884704.htm
1
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1
[ 7462 ]
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story
stevendavis0830
2007-03-30T01:27:26
Top 25 Web 2.0 Websites By Traffic, March 2007
null
http://www.ebizmba.com/articles/web2.html
3
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3
[ 7467, 7492, 7488 ]
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true
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comment
johnm
2007-03-30T01:35:37
null
Might be nice if it worked under Safari rather than just hanging. :-(
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comment
bootload
2007-03-30T01:35:42
null
<i>'... Entrepreneurs are misfits, they are miscreants they are creative deviant ... these innovators often live life on the edge ...'</i> [0]<p><i>'... results showed that the kids at risk and the entrepreneurs were similar on a number of dimensions... pathological anarchist ... Anarchy is about lack of control, lack of boundaries.. create something from those random concepts ...'</i> [1]<p>Transcript of a weekly science show shows the building blocks for entrepreneurs & how they are used by entrepreneurs. Illustrates how using them you can improve entrepreneurial behaviour. The descriptive bit on the title, <i>'serial entrepreneurs share qualities with street kids'</i> I grabbed from psychologist, Louise Earnshaw [2], who in the course of her studies identified risk taking as a common trait among self-made businessmen [3] .<p>The thing I got out of watching (reading as well) was the key characteristics & traits common to entrepreneurs and the science behind it.<p><p>Reference<p>[0] ABC TV, Catalyst, 'The Science of Business 'How to make it Big'', 29 March, 2007. Reported by Dr Paul Willis"<p><a href="http://www.abc.net.au/catalyst/stories/s1884704.htm">http://www.abc.net.au/catalyst/stories/s1884704.htm</a><p> [2] ABC TV, Catalyst, 'The Science of Business 'How to make it Big'', Ibid.<p>[2] Louise Earnshaw, psychologist, "University of Queensland, School of Psychology, PhD Candidate: Entrepreneurial Psychology" <a href="http://www.psy.uq.edu.au/people/personal.html?id=244">http://www.psy.uq.edu.au/people/personal.html?id=244</a><p>[3] In Australia the word <i>entrepreneur</i> has a close association with huckster, grifters & con men and is not used as widely as in the United States.
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brett
2007-03-30T01:42:32
Craig Newmark on net neutrality
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http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/06/09/newmark.internet/index.html
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[ 7495, 7465 ]
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randallsquared
2007-03-30T01:43:30
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Well, I wouldn't go that far, but it is easier for those of us who have wives who are interested in <i>being</i> a founder, rather than a founder's wife. :)
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domp
2007-03-30T01:47:58
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<a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=7416">http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=7416</a>
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jw
2007-03-30T01:48:43
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I agree that you should know your target audience, but I think it's also a cost-benefit issue. I'm all for making your page accessible to as many people as possible, but in many cases it's not practical to cater to the 3 hits per month that for some reason still use Netscape 4.x.<p>I disagree with the article that you might need to "dig out some old favorites like @import" for older browsers. As discussed in "To Hell With Bad Browsers" ( <a href="http://www.alistapart.com/articles/tohell">http://www.alistapart.com/articles/tohell</a> ), you shouldn't have to deal with people who refuse to use a modern browser. (Hmm that was 6 years ago now... am I old?)<p>I agree with the article that it's illogical to load an entire page with AJAX and not have a non-javascript option, but I think the whole 3-level scheme is overkill in some cases. I think it comes back to knowing your audience, and designing your site so that they will be able to use it how they want.
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brett
2007-03-30T01:57:58
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It would be really nice if links to this site went away.
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bootload
2007-03-30T02:00:07
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There must be a bit of latent demand for <i>cute</i> or whimsical icons or cartoons. I remember back a while I saw an on-line <i>'wanted'</i> advert for blog cartoonist. So I'm not surprised ~ <a href="http://flickr.com/photos/bootload/213561726/">http://flickr.com/photos/bootload/213561726/</a><p>If you are, please read the about how Hugh MacLeods' "gaping void ", is used as an attention grabber for marketing other products ~ <a href="http://www.gapingvoid.com/Moveable_Type/archives/002670.html">http://www.gapingvoid.com/Moveable_Type/archives/002670.html</a>
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chandrab
2007-03-30T02:00:50
Scaling PHP/MySQL...Presentation from Flickr (very good)
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http://www.ludicorp.com/flickr/zend-talk.ppt
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[ 7497, 7522, 7510 ]
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usablecontent
2007-03-30T02:00:57
Scribd is Youtube for documents, Literally
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http://startupmeme.com/2007/03/29/scribd-is-youtube-for-documents-literally/
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rfrey
2007-03-30T02:08:22
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In the beginning, there was HTML, and lo, there was much rejoicing among the scientists. Content was king. HTML was to provide guidelines for presentation, without dictating exact formatting. Lynx and Mosaic users existed in harmony.<p>Then came the .com rush, and with them, their horde of designers. Designers used tables to wring miracles from HTML, all above the protests of the purists -- "HTML is not a page description language!", "What about the Lynx users??" etc.<p>But what the purists missed was that the landscape had changed. HTML was no longer just about content: de facto, it had become about the presentation as well. Eventually CSS caught up and specs mirrored reality.<p>Ironically, it's the designers, like the author, who are now missing the context change. It's their turn to be the dinosaurs. Web 2.0 is not just about more presentation options; spice and sugar on a page-oriented website. AJAX is about building applications that use the browser as the environment. Protesting that cell phone users won't be able to use the app is missing the point. Do people complain that Writely doesn't work on a cellphone? <p>(Well, maybe they do. Stuff 'em! :)
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RexDixon
2007-03-30T02:14:31
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Infomercial as in Don Lapre, or even a late night WWE promo. Better yet - a late night ORIGINAL ECW video, with real promo's... commerical, video commercial -- sell your start up and save some money by grabbing some free ad space on CenterNetworks.
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domp
2007-03-30T02:15:03
T9space has 4 million pageviews. Gives mobile access to the popular social networks
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http://mashable.com/2007/03/29/t9space/
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chandrab
2007-03-30T02:16:59
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I worked at company full of ex-Digital Equip Guys and they had similar procedures to Google except they had design "approach" reviews, where over lunch you presented your design for a feature/function etc. to your peers. It was quite effective for finding new approaches or things you haven't thought about. I was impressed enough with the process that I often thought I'd try it if I was ever the head of an engineering dept. The company did produce some industrial strength network management code.
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domp
2007-03-30T02:23:00
Top 10 Brands on Digg
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http://www.pronetadvertising.com/articles/10-most-popular-brands-on-digg23546.html
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randallsquared
2007-03-30T02:27:40
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But if we avoid requiring the dedicated poll code, PG won't need to get around to writing it... So the obvious solution is that everyone should make a point of doing a poll a day until PG writes the code.
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chandrab
2007-03-30T02:33:05
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I got to say this was idea was very clever. kudos to Phil K!
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abstractbill
2007-03-30T02:36:19
Cell phone classified-ads startup launched
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http://iqzone.com/
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britman
2007-03-30T02:50:28
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Ok interesting stuff - thanks for the replies. Does anyone know the guys from auctomatic post on these pages at all?
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staunch
2007-03-30T02:55:48
[kill please]
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http://static.last.fm/matt/fowa/
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staunch
2007-03-30T02:58:08
Great LAMP Scaling Presentation by Matt Ogle of Last.fm (PDF)
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http://static.last.fm/matt/fowa/workshop.pdf
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dherman76
2007-03-30T03:02:57
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Very impressive essay. I'm a founder of a startup and agree with most things here. Great job.
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jw
2007-03-30T03:12:12
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Sure, that may be what AJAX and Web 2.0 are about. But isn't the point of a web site to provide some service? In the case of Lala, the service is to facilitate CD trading (or something along those lines). To best provide that service, do they really need Web 2.0 and AJAX? If they want to accomodate users of mobile devices (and wouldn't they? every visitor is a potential customer), then they should provide a working interface for those users.<p>On the other hand, if they think AJAX is the best way to provide their service, that's up to them... it's their web site. I think the author really means that they should be designing for a wider audience if they want to appease as many visitors as possible. Whether that demographic is important enough to bother with is another question.
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iamwil
2007-03-30T03:39:13
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Hey, that's one way to flirt with the ladies...casting your spell.
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Goladus
2007-03-30T03:39:47
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Reddit renders in lynx. The reply boxes aren't hidden in the comments list, and I can't log in. Otherwise the site is easily usable.<p>I can load lala.com, and do get a nice description of the page (which is better than some sites!). I can access the search field, but can't change the categories. I can't press the search button.<p>I'd be interested to know the reason why, for example, they chose to set up their categories like that, rather than using some sort of radio button form. And if they're going to use AJAX, why not make the "tabs" look like actual tabs? What benefits are gained by having a search button that can't be pressed without javascript?
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Goladus
2007-03-30T03:44:27
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What is the benefit of using the "web browser as the environment" mentality in this case? Future extensibility? Scalability? Rapid development? Or just that they couldn't think of a better way to do it?<p>
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jayded
2007-03-30T03:47:28
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Hate to burst your bubble but it's been done already... ...sodahead.com
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markfranks101
2007-03-30T03:48:21
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I find their information rather informative. Maybe you should go away!
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Goladus
2007-03-30T04:06:45
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I've discovered that writing MIDI music is eerily like writing software. The whole process feels almost exactly the same. You compose (code), you listen (run), you make corrections (debug), you polish (optimize), you add sections (modules/features), which leads to more correction and optimization. Sometimes, changes cascade throughout the piece (refactoring).<p>In the end, you have a hideous progeny that's not as good as you'd like but you know you can't work on it forever.
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staunch
2007-03-30T04:07:44
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Works even more easily when the IP is static, you just register the name don't update the IP. But yeah -- get a domain :-)<p>
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amichail
2007-03-30T04:08:09
Students give up social networks for Lent
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http://edition.cnn.com/2007/TECH/internet/03/29/no.facebook.lent/index.html
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[ 7526, 7557 ]
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Sam_Odio
2007-03-30T04:10:11
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wow this site is driving me crazy. The data isn't even that accurate...<p>Earlier they indicated reddit was getting ~400k hits / month, from what Alexis has said, they're actually getting more like ~160K / day.
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dfranke
2007-03-30T04:10:52
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I think this is the last we'll see of them. Paul gave them an ultimatum yesterday and they just violated it with this post.
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brett
2007-03-30T04:18:46
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yeah. whoops. didn't realize it was a dupe cause the other one is the 37signals writeup.
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pg
2007-03-30T04:21:07
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I was never 100% sure about "net neutrality" (99% maybe) till I read the opposing view by Mike McCurry. What a blatant piece of hired hackwork. The side that needs to employ someone to write things like that must be the wrong side.
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whacked_new
2007-03-30T04:21:20
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Um... why is this a link to a redirect?
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lackbeard
2007-03-30T04:50:52
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In case you have flash in your browser, but not power point: <a href="http://www.scribd.com/doc/21593/Scaling-PHPMySQL">http://www.scribd.com/doc/21593/Scaling-PHPMySQL</a>
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dfranke
2007-03-30T04:57:35
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This looks like a terrible abuse of Flash. Why not just encode the parameters into the image URL and have it handled server-side?<p>I'm not just being an ideological purist here. I have two systems. One is pure 64-bit and thus simply can't run Flash, and the other uses Firefox's FlashBlock extension. If your site demands that I use Flash for something as simple as just viewing an image, you're going to give me a pretty lousy user experience. And of course, even those with no trouble running Flash are still prevented from easily being able to save an offline copy.
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staunch
2007-03-30T05:01:32
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I agree wholeheartedly. What kind of woman would rather you spend decades of your life in a situation you find <i>miserable</i> than sacrifice and suffer alongside you while you follow your dream?<p>For someone who feels like I do this is totally non-negotiable. I would have no problem losing a woman over this question because it would only filter out women that are worth losing anyway.
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