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comatose_kid
2007-03-13T21:43:15
null
Here's a great way to grow:<p> How about inserting a clause in your funding agreement? Any company that you fund should provide a small percentage of profits + time to help new founders. <p>This small percentage of profits would be given to YC, on condition that YC would use it exclusively to fund new companies. Of course, 'profit' implies that YC would be able to fund 1000 startups a year only if its existing investments are successful. Essentially, YC would earn the opportunity to increase the # of companies it funds based on the success of its previous investments. <p>And as for the founders time, it seems you already have that covered. <p>The most limited resource seems to be your time. I don't think there's an easy answer to that one. You may need to expand your partnership....<p>The question for me is: are there even 1000 companies worth funding every year? That would be cool to see. Perhaps some of the profits could be directed towards developing the base of potential entrepreneurs.
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volida
2007-03-13T21:44:48
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I think the reason everyone is applying to YC is because of networking and connections which is really valuable. Now, if there were 1000 companies being funded by YC it means there would be so many people with access to these connections. Which means the value of YC's network would drop. A lot of people then wouldn't feel really erged to apply while this competition the are feeling among them when applying, would be lost, if anyone with iq higher than 130 was getting funded...<p>*update:<p>more people getting funded = (lim markets - shrinks/saturation) =&gt probability people fail &gt probability people succeed =&gt bubble breaks <p>this will be the feelings and hopes bubble, and not investments bubble, because obviously whereas with the same money (e.g. 1 million USD) invested during 1999 only 1 company could appear, using YC's approach with the same money, more startups are given birth. <p>Thus this is the bubble also but not in investors return (because the rate of propability increases using YC's approach) but in founders feelings...
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phil
2007-03-13T22:03:18
Fixing Venture Capital - Joel on Software
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http://www.joelonsoftware.com/printerFriendly/articles/VC.html
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pg
2007-03-13T22:14:54
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I better get to work on messaging.
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dawie
2007-03-13T22:17:24
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Look at ways to make it viral. Get fans to invite each other
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pg
2007-03-13T22:19:52
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<a href="http://www.auralex.com/acoustic_studiofoam_4p/acoustic_studiofoam_4p.asp">http://www.auralex.com/acoustic_studiofoam_4p/acoustic_studiofoam_4p.asp</a>
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JMiao
2007-03-13T22:21:02
Social Network For Gamers
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http://www.gamervision.com/
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larrykubin
2007-03-13T22:21:23
Has Ycombinator ever funded a group that hasn't known each other long? For instance, a group that met at Startup School?
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JMiao
2007-03-13T22:25:42
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I'm curious how this stands a chance in light of XBOX Live and popular gaming sites like Gamespot. Facebook has an ongoing petition for a "Favorite Games" profile category, but I know that Gamespot has had a tough time getting people to interact outside of commenting on news articles and previews.<p>Sort of bothered by the site's cluttered design -- the blog posts on the left hand side are colored to look like cheesy, forgettable advertising.
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cbueno
2007-03-13T22:27:48
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I saw Boord last week at a startup panel at Florida Intl Uni. It reminded me of Garcia-Marquez's book "In Evil Hour/La mala hora", in which a town is plagued by anonymous character assasination.<p>There are two problems that everyone latches onto when they hear about it: posts are anonymous, and you can't opt in or out. The model is coercive. If someone wants to attack you you are given no choice but to register and marshall your friends.<p>On the other hand, I discount objections that everyone immediately latches onto. Often that means the idea is simply strange or taboo, not unworkable. Remember that the first proposed application of anonymous digital cash was an assasination pool.
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domp
2007-03-13T22:36:07
Music's New Gatekeepers: Apple and Silicon Valley
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http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB117340340327331757-aqC21fdikWTyQ_8Wq0nkNv4l5j4_20070407.html?mod=tff_main_tff_top
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JMiao
2007-03-13T22:38:32
null
I would imagine such a situation to be dicey. Startups are forged around shared passion, trust, and ability to work well together, not too different from marriage. Using the marriage metaphor, I think going into business together on a first impression puts you and your cofounders in a tight spot.
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far33d
2007-03-13T22:41:40
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Aren't the biggest social networks for gamers the games themselves? (at least for MMOG)
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JMiao
2007-03-13T22:48:25
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I definitely hear what you're saying (my background is in interactive games)...aside from MMOs, this is another compelling reason why a unified online framework like XBOX Live works so well.<p>Things like Gamervision are more focused on networks for gamer interests ("life outside of the game"), i.e. discussing things that matter to gamers. There's another one specific to WOW called Rupture that is VC-backed and founded by Shawn Fanning of Napster fame.<p>Again, I'm not defending things like Gamervision. I'm more keen about Raph Koster's work.
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jasonyan
2007-03-13T22:49:00
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I'm not a fan of Mac OS X by any means, but I have to admit, the hardware is impressive. I'm in the market for a new laptop, and I'm hard pressed against picking one up because they aren't that much more expensive than the laptops that I am looking at.
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JMiao
2007-03-13T22:53:46
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It's a Segwell.
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mynameishere
2007-03-13T22:56:53
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http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=2853515&CatId=2511<p>Versus<p>http://store.apple.com/1-800-MY-APPLE/WebObjects/AppleStore?family=MacBookPro<p>These are comparable systems, but the Apple has, as I said, roughly an 800 dollar premium. Actually, the cheapest macbook pro costs the same as the high-end Toshiba. If you make good money, it's not a big deal. But when the girl in the coffeehouse asks me what kind of computer she should get to go along with her minimum wage, I'm basically scum to recommend an Apple.
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danw
2007-03-13T23:06:25
null
So what your suggesting is creating mini YCs with specialist interests?<p>For example you could have a mobile apps 'agent'. This person would seek out the best ideas for mobile apps, find the best teams, maintain connections with mobile blogs & mobile network operators and pass the best teams back up to main YC.<p>O'r you could have geographical specialists who, for example, look out for startups in the UK and send the most promising over to Boston/Mountain View.
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RyanGWU82
2007-03-13T23:11:35
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It's not automatically dicey. My cofounders and I found each other specifically for the purpose of starting this business. We're four months into our venture now. We get along extremely well, our skills complement each other nicely, and we have a lot of faith in each other and in our business. I can't imagine having a working dynamic as strong as this one even with my close long-term friends.
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Harj
2007-03-13T23:29:37
null
one thing to remember is that much like doing a startup in general, there are no hard and fast rules about getting YC funding.<p>YC had every reason not to invest in us - we weren't technical, we already had angel money which complicated issuing new shares and we were based in the UK. they still funded us.<p>YC funding is less about worrying about all the reasons you won't get funded and concentrate on making as many reasons why they will fund you.
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far33d
2007-03-13T23:33:37
Speed Dating with VCs
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http://www.mercurynews.com/vc/ci_5365240
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ashu
2007-03-13T23:38:29
null
Quite insightful, Adam! Thanks for that article...
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notabel
2007-03-13T23:39:59
null
This article made me smile. Perhaps more importantly, it made me reread WhyFP, and the pastiche WhyHaskell. I'm a member of the choir, of course, but it's often good to read over a classic text to glean fresh understanding, and perhaps most importantly to see how "timeless wisdom" applies to your current adventures. (It's for that reason that I'm rereading The Mythical Man-Month.)
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jullrich1
2007-03-13T23:52:19
null
Yeah Dan, that's right on. The basic business practices employed today would flow through to the tentacles of specialization and the over reaching controls and management would still reside at the top like any other holding company structure. It's likely you could improve on the typical holding company structure but something along those lines. I work at the Group level of a global financial services firm and I think my stripes are showing a bit here :) Not just mobile apps but also a p2p apps expert, b2b apps expert, transaction processing expert...the options are as broad as the marketplace. I'm thinking big.
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dfranke
2007-03-13T23:53:52
null
A few critiques:<p>1. Get your TOS rewritten by a lawyer, pronto. Several sentences aren't even grammatical. Don't ever say "we will" in a document like this. Use "may" or "reserve the right to" instead. IANAL but I suspect that your current language is causing you to forfeit your claim to being a common carrier.<p>2. You don't need my email address. Let me just provide a username instead; or better, OpenID.<p>3. Make it more clear that the tab on the bottom right expands into a menu. I didn't realize it until I dragged my mouse over it by accident.<p>4. Let me change the address to which I can send photos, or at least generate one that's easier to remember.<p>5a. The text "How it Works" needs to be a link to a prose description.<p>5b. The "How it Works" image needs to be less artistic. When you see something drawn in that sort of style you expect it to be decorative, not informative. I didn't realize that it was intended to convey information until I tried to click on it and nothing happened, and then looked closely at it.
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JMiao
2007-03-14T00:03:38
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I see what you're saying, but, to a certain extent, you won't be able to test what your team is truly made of until you guys hit that first bump -- this is when things become clearer, and I would imagine you wouldn't want to wake up one morning wondering how you got in that bed in the first place.<p>Nonetheless, I'm happy to hear that you were able to find good cofounders!
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JMiao
2007-03-14T00:08:27
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Nice one, Daniel.
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jward
2007-03-14T00:27:13
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I still go for dead tree on most subjects I'm interested in. I rarely read them all the way through however. For me they're mostly meditative aids that help me sort out my thoughts when I run into a wall.<p>When I'm stuck I can only bang my head against the problem for so long until I get frustrated. Having a dead tree version lets me completely leave the computer behind. Reading about anything related helps my mind reorganize and regroup. After an hour or so with my nose in a book I have at minimum an idea of something new to try.<p>Also, the book store I go to is in the same building Bioware was based out for many years. It's just a reminder to me of success that was born just a few blocks from me.
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dfranke
2007-03-14T00:37:58
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Whenever you shrink a market by creating wealth, you'll grow other completely unrelated markets. The money left in consumers' pockets is unlikely to simply remain in their pockets indefinitely.
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jward
2007-03-14T00:42:23
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Django makes it very easy to have something working up and running right away and has a fair number of advantages that go along with it. After looking over languages and frameworks it is what I've picked to write any future web app in. I've yet to see anything more compelling. <p>A nice tutorial and walk through is a good way to get your feet wet with a framework and language. You have to build a site using something and have to start somewhere. Because of Django, and lack of sleep, imageboard.net was up and working in a single weekend. It's worth checking out.
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danw
2007-03-14T00:43:31
Is Google Changing Its Position on Net Neutrality?
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http://gigaom.com/2007/03/13/is-google-changing-its-position-on-net-neutrality/
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danw
2007-03-14T00:50:04
null
I'm curious, did an admin change the link to be direct to wired or was it done by msgbeepa?
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danw
2007-03-14T00:54:33
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The fact that nobody took the bait and started a flame war is a testament to the quality of the YC news community
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nostrademons
2007-03-14T00:57:56
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Second-tier university endowments and pension funds, the ones trying to catch Harvard & Amherst in endowment performance. They know that if the fund performs well, they look like a genius, yet if it fails, the poor college students and retirees are left holding the bag.<p>The whole economy has a huge moral hazard problem. There's a reason why John Nash won a Nobel Prize.
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ph
2007-03-14T00:58:02
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Amazon (and others) will sell you time on a massive grid. Amazon's is called Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2), and it seems like it might be a good alternative to a VPS -- the elasticity of each instance would be a boon to a quickly growing web service.<p>I am currently developing my startup's software on a dedicated server running FreeBSD, and I am paying some attention to making it so it will scale (probably in a load balanced cluster). <p>To this end, I have set up FreeBSD jails (low overhead chrooted full installs) so that I can test splitting up the application in various ways.<p>I would imagine that a transparent grid system would reduce the need to worry about scalability issues for many uses.
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amichail
2007-03-14T01:23:03
Ten things you should not say to your VC.
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http://safari.phptr.com/0130654930/ch09lev1sec13
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pg
2007-03-14T01:44:41
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I know of cases where cofounders met at startup school, but we haven't funded any. The most ad hoc group of founders we funded were a pair who knew one another online but hadn't met. That didn't work out very well.
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pg
2007-03-14T01:47:52
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To combat linkjacking, people with editor auth can replace linkjacked urls with the url of the original source. The original submitter still gets the karma points though; he was after all the one who brought it to everyone's attention.
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amichail
2007-03-14T01:52:30
Every Demo 2007 startup ranked from 1 to 62
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http://vcratings.thedealblogs.com/2007/02/every_demo_2007_startup_ranked.php
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lupin_sansei
2007-03-14T01:55:17
null
We really need a down button on the links. So many of them suck.
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pashle
2007-03-14T01:57:30
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elias, THAT story is a keeper, and it's going in the vault!
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pashle
2007-03-14T02:01:10
null
This one comes from Paul Graham, from 'How To Start A Startup':<p>"What you should do in college is work on your own projects. Hackers should do this even if they don't plan to start startups, because it's the only real way to learn how to program. In some cases you may collaborate with other students, and this is the best way to get to know good hackers. The project may even grow into a startup. But once again, I wouldn't aim too directly at either target. Don't force things; just work on stuff you like with people you like."<p>Granted, it's targeted towards a college student (which I am), there's an underlying principle that can be applied to most any case you might face. Just do projects with people you like. Too simple.
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brett
2007-03-14T02:05:47
Is Your Startup Destined to Fail? - The 90 percent failure rate myth
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http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/printthis/173214.html
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jmzachary
2007-03-14T02:06:03
null
What is Phil Mickelson doing there on a Segwell?
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brett
2007-03-14T02:08:26
null
my favorite line: "At any rate, it seems clear that some people simply want to believe that entrepreneurship is harder than it really is."
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jmzachary
2007-03-14T02:08:43
null
What is left that is interesting to do in CS? Why is it "completely ridiculous" to suggest that everything interesting in CS has been done? Disprove it by example.
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juwo
2007-03-14T02:11:05
null
I cant believe someone actually posted this - google and you will find an article by someone who saw such an advt. and says why it is such a bad idea
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juwo
2007-03-14T02:13:33
null
that is true. Did you code pindax.com? good stuff.<p>
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juwo
2007-03-14T02:14:58
null
yes, it is. my neighbours who were never friendly, became downright suspicious when I worked from home.
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amichail
2007-03-14T02:34:08
Collaborative startup specification: let the masses tell you what to build (so you know that you will have many users before you even begin)
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amichail
2007-03-14T02:36:59
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Why try to guess what many people would want? Let them tell you more directly via a service for collaborative startup specification. Unlike implementation, specification -- at least at an informal level -- can be done by pretty well anyone. Of course, you will need to provide some way to end up with a coherent spec from all those user contributions. But if something like wikipedia can produce stellar results, then why not this?<p>And when you start working on something, why not keep all those people up to date with your progress? They would probably be very eager to see what you are doing with their spec contributions. And they may evolve the spec over time, again, in a collaborative way.<p>When your startup is ready to launch, you will then have all those people ready to try it out and tell their friends.
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dfranke
2007-03-14T02:38:11
null
They're trying to compete with Digg/Reddit with *that*? It looks like Altavista circa 2000.
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raganwald
2007-03-14T02:41:53
null
Thank you.
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dfranke
2007-03-14T03:18:48
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I thought this video looked vaguely familiar, and then I noticed myself standing in the peanut gallery.
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mynameishere
2007-03-14T03:53:53
null
The music business, huh? <p>Finally, we're going to start roping in the chicks! Just like back in the FORTRAN days!
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vegashacker
2007-03-14T04:05:27
null
I've always been pretty skeptical of the 90% number, but I don't think this article clears up the matter. I'm assuming all of us here aren't interested in opening up a mini-mart (rather we're interested in startups in the PG definition of the word -- basically something that scales). And yet, the "over half" figure that's quoted in the article I'm sure includes things like mini-marts. And I would guess that a mini-mart business has a better chance of staying open over a year than a tech startup does. So the "over half" might be inflated in the other direction. <p>Also, I wonder if companies that in reality fail before one year might just tend to wait until the next tax year comes before officially shutting it down with the government. If so, depending on how the stats were found, this could inflate the success percentage.
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dfranke
2007-03-14T04:23:14
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Wikipedia isn't the right mechanism. It's fine when you're collaborating on documenting something that's completely objective, but as soon as you get into something controversial it descends into chaos. There's good reason that some of the highest-quality articles on Wikipedia tend to be the ones about math.<p>Darcs/git might be a better model for this sort of thing: everybody gets their own working copy and can merge changes made to other copies into their own.
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amichail
2007-03-14T04:26:42
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Maybe you can use something like reddit for this purpose.
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domp
2007-03-14T04:44:24
null
How about emailing people at some of the popular ezines that are in your target demographic. They could post about it and you'd probably get a lot of traffic and artists interested in signing up.<p>I also agree that going to shows and introducing yourself to bands will help. Any personal interaction like that would get me to try out the service over a junk spam message on myspace.
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nostrademons
2007-03-14T04:45:06
null
There was some study - I think it was linked to on Dharmesh Shah's blog (onstartups.com) a month or so back - that indicated the success rate for first time entrepreneurs in VC-funded tech startups was 18%. For entrepreneurs with a previous failure it was 20%, and for entrepreneurs with a previous success it was 33%.<p>I suspect that the success rate is somewhat higher for bootstrapped tech startups, because you're given the option of failing and trying again with the same company, different idea. Usually if you fail with a VC's money, they liquidate the company. If you fail with your own, you can take the assets you have and try to redirect them to a new line of business.<p>I thought I saw another study somewhere that said that the average number of failures a bootstrapped startup goes through is 4. That squares with the success rates for VC-funded startups above, if you assume that each failure simply means the entrepreneur tries a new idea. You have a 18% chance of succeeding on the first try, a 33% chance of succeeding by the second try (82% * 82% = 67.24% chance of failing), a 45% chance of succeeding by the third try, and a 55% chance of succeeding by the fourth try, for an average of 3-4 attempts necessary before success.
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dbenhur
2007-03-14T05:19:20
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Shared services mean that mistakes made by any other client on that machine are very likely to damage you. Also, without root access, you are often stuck not being able to set a configuration well. For a hobby site, or a sandbox, shared hosts are fine and cheap. I would never deploy a real web application on one though. Many places will sell you a Xen VPS slice for $20-30/mo.
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domp
2007-03-14T05:20:56
Social Networking Niches
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http://businessweek.com/technology/content/mar2007/tc20070314_884996.htm?chan=top+news_top+news+index_businessweek+exclusives
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henryw
2007-03-14T05:40:14
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He speaks humorously with a good point (Go do it!). I don't think someone just starting up should be in the same state of confidence as he is, but his attitude towards working hard is noteworthy. He can speak whatever he wants, how he wants. That's a nice freedom. Picking up his book on Amazon with Founders at Work. Even if I don't learn something from him, I'll at least be amused, http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/0091912652/ref=dp_olp_2/103-9496918-3879027
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henryw
2007-03-14T05:52:58
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I've been trying to spend a lot of time on graphic design lately, and the link to the free icons will be very helpful. http://www.iconbuffet.com/freedelivery/packages
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staunch
2007-03-14T06:01:54
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Very interesting for those of us playing the YC home-game to get a glimpse on occasion. Thank you.<p>
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far33d
2007-03-14T06:02:48
(iPod + pandora + wifi + satrad == slacker)??
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http://venturebeat.com/2007/03/13/slacker-the-real-ipod-killer/
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[ 4167, 4098, 4113, 4072 ]
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staunch
2007-03-14T06:14:04
null
This is really a great question. It's tough being isolated and tiny. At this stage you would rather be hated than ignored, but one even cares enough to hate you.<p>For your first users I think you have to do it "the hard way", by really _selling_ the product. Go manually find the low-hanging fruit for your product. Find the early adopters -- the people who will be delighted to learn your product exists and immediately understand its utility.<p>Bug all the people you know and get them to use your product where it makes sense.<p>
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staunch
2007-03-14T06:24:54
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Find customers using a crappy solution to the problem you have a good solution to. Help them move to your solution.
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pg
2007-03-14T06:31:46
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If the success rate for VC funded startups is 18%, then I could easily believe the overall rate is 10% or lower, because angels fund more startups than VCs, and they are less selective.
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dfranke
2007-03-14T06:35:17
null
I suppose the sincerest form of voting would be merging others' ideas into your working copy. The system could track that and maintain a leaderboard of most-assimilated specs.
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staunch
2007-03-14T06:36:40
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python_kiss "If you don't know where you're going, you will end up somewhere else."<p>I prefer "Wherever you go, there you are"<p>python_kiss "Startups should always have a week long tactical plan and a rough strategic goal stretched upto three months."<p>It doesn't matter how well you plan, you're going to run into brick walls. Most startups run into one and say "Oh damn, I guess we lost, let's go home." (secretly relieved to be giving up) -- other startups say "Brick wall? Where's my sledge hammer, this thing is toast!"
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ttonca
2007-03-14T06:45:25
null
That was a good post. All of the recent big "winners" have not only shrunk markets but redefined their industries altogether.
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JMiao
2007-03-14T07:01:02
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far33d -- are your interests mainly with entertainment+technology? i've picked up a pattern via your posts.<p>sounds like we might have similar interests. are you going to startup school?
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lupin_sansei
2007-03-14T07:01:03
null
AI, Higher level languages. Greenspun's idea to have a formal description for websites so you don't need to keep reinventing the wheel, Quantum computers, chemical computers, gesture interfaces, robotics, and so on.
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ereldon
2007-03-14T07:06:27
null
i don't see why biz week mentions myspace and friendster first -- facebook whoops friendster's ass as far as #s are concerned, and is gonna be overtaking myspace pretty soon in terms of %returning users/day.
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JoeEntrepreneur
2007-03-14T07:08:00
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Wouldn't it be in YC's interest to take some equity WITHOUT providing any funding in return of advice, Guidance, and a platform and connections.
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dfranke
2007-03-14T07:12:02
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If startups are going to compete with big companies, they need to do it on innovation, not price. Big companies have the upper hand on price because they have economics of scale.
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brett
2007-03-14T07:28:09
How is the lack of password confirmation working out on YC News?
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[ 4105, 4132, 4078 ]
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brett
2007-03-14T07:32:31
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Many accounts that never get logged into again? Anyone emailing because they entered a funky password?<p>It feels right but still scares me; I'm always mistyping things. <p>Who else doesn't confirm passwords?
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nickb
2007-03-14T07:33:28
null
MSPW?
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brett
2007-03-14T07:35:03
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Meanwhile on my terminal:<p>svn ci -m "no password confirmation"
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staunch
2007-03-14T08:01:28
Mark Fletcher's History of ONElist ("The ONElist File")
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http://wingedpig.com/ol/toc.html
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comment
jwecker
2007-03-14T08:30:19
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make something people want
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danielha
2007-03-14T08:54:59
TheFunded.com: The Resource for Entrepreneurs (a place to research/rate VC firms with first-hand experiences)
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http://www.thefunded.com/
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[ 4084, 4194 ]
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danielha
2007-03-14T08:56:50
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TechCrunch preview:<p>http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/14/reckoning-day-for-venture-capitalists/
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danielha
2007-03-14T09:14:02
RaiseCapital.com
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http://raisecapital.com/home.php
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noisemaker
2007-03-14T09:23:37
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I gotta love a fellow buckaroo. <p>As far as a typical outline or long term goal, from my experience with YC's quite a few of them have goals way off in the horizon. <p>I do have to agree that a certain extent of the whole plan should not center around one solid idea, but an idea that can easily be remolded. This industry changes so fast, and it has no room for others that cannot change with it.<p>Personally, I had a sledgehammer going into this from the get-go. I'm just waiting for those walls to finally use my shiny new hammer on.
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jward
2007-03-14T10:09:34
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If I could prove what could still be done in CS I'd do it myself and become rich and famous ;)<p>As for something I saw recently that blew my mind was video of a presentation at google. The premise was figuring out how to have a system automatically compress, decompress, and predict based on arbitrary data. I wish I could find the link. Very neat stuff.<p>No matter what, there's always more to learn and discover.
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clintonforbes
2007-03-14T10:50:39
White-collar pride in workmanship
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http://clintonforbes.blogspot.com/2007/03/white-collar-pride-in-workmanship.html
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mattculbreth
2007-03-14T11:00:10
One Calendar to Rule Them All
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http://webworkerdaily.com/2007/03/12/one-calendar-to-rule-them-all/
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msgbeepa
2007-03-14T11:10:46
Sticky News In Sticky Notes
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http://www.wikio.com/webinfo?id=14730938
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martyf888
2007-03-14T11:25:48
New "Meta" Comparison Shopping Engine - RoboShopper.com
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http://www.roboshopper.com
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python_kiss
2007-03-14T11:36:50
SXSW: Why Marketers Need To Work With Social Media
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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/sxsw_people_media.php
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Alex3917
2007-03-14T11:50:31
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It would be nice if I could do something without having an account. Take a tour or play with a demo perhaps.
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smackaysmith
2007-03-14T12:00:01
Forest fires and influence
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http://herd.typepad.com/herd_the_hidden_truth_abo/
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jamongkad
2007-03-14T12:02:06
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Oh my bad sorry! I was sleepy last night and didn't noticed it.
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python_kiss
2007-03-14T12:05:14
MySpace Bans Searches for 69 Year Olds
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http://mashable.com/2007/03/13/myspace-bans-searches-for-69-year-olds-due-to-sexual-connotation/
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jamongkad
2007-03-14T12:05:21
The future is Mobile VoIP
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http://www.wi-fiplanet.com/news/article.php/3489221
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danw
2007-03-14T12:25:41
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Whoah, this is very similar to a mobile app I'm currently producing for my final project at University.
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python_kiss
2007-03-14T12:29:09
Reddit, Del.icio.us, Slashdot, and Digg in cartoons (Social Media Websites Illustrated)
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http://www.drivl.com/posts/view/731
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