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415 | null | story | onebeerdave | 1,172,100,176 | null | null | null | null | [
421
] | http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/02/21/possible-major-google-announcement-tomorrow/ | 2 | Possible Major Google Announcement Tomorrow | null | 2 |
409 | null | comment | ecuzzillo | 1,172,098,360 | So, the community that talks a lot about startups is a good idea, but taking community advice directly seems a little iffy. It may be that this group happens to be mostly composed of people who could successfully run a startup, but I doubt it, and if it were true, it certainly wouldn't last very long. If you take any random set of people interested in startups, it's not likely that a majority of them would vote up the right pieces of advice. I prefer the more general submit-links-and-comment model, since the links tend to be more useful data than pure advice. | null | 382 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
403 | null | comment | gustaf | 1,172,094,935 | I've tried this service on my Nokia and it's impressive! | null | 290 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
408 | null | comment | Elfan | 1,172,098,135 | - Some way to mark as read/downvote/hide. I prefer to be able to go through the "new" section and do this.
- Comment history in profile.
- "Best of" history.
- This is a silly little thing, but make the X comments/discuss link larger. I usually go down the page and open that page for any interesting article in a new tab.
- Someway to format posts so ones like this don't look silly and return to the main page thread after editing. | null | 363 | null | [
1195
] | null | null | null | null | null |
399 | null | comment | leoc | 1,172,093,895 | Please let users add a few words about themselves on their userpages. It's a useful way to learn a little more about an interesting commentator. And isn't that the main purpose of the site? Links to homepages can of course be useful too. | null | 363 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
407 | null | comment | mattculbreth | 1,172,096,629 | 1. AJAX for the voting arrow(s); 2. RSS; 3. Search | null | 363 | null | [
12592
] | null | null | null | null | null |
405 | null | comment | jwecker | 1,172,095,254 | I think this is a great idea. It would let things like slashdot's "funny" and "insightful" happen organically. I've been toying with doing something similar for a political blog for a while. | null | 392 | null | [
905
] | null | null | null | null | null |
401 | null | comment | nostrademons | 1,172,094,803 | I did the first 7 semesters of my undergrad in physics, and still have a lot of friends doing Ph.Ds in physics. A bachelors in physics opens up a large expanse of possibilities - finance, management consulting, economics consulting, computer programming, high school math teacher, and of course physics grad school. A Ph.D in physics qualifies you for exactly one job: physics professor. There are far more opportunities for a physics drop-out than a physics Ph.D, particularly for someone who doesn't absolutely, positively love the subject. | null | 240 | null | [
419,
644
] | null | null | null | null | null |
413 | null | comment | phil | 1,172,099,368 | wouldn't it be simpler to just decide that it's ok to submit your own posts? some people have done that already and it seems fine to me: they're among the best links here. | null | 393 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
411 | null | comment | nostrademons | 1,172,099,111 | Is there anyone doing case studies of *unsuccessful* internet startups? The successful ones are helpful, but it's easy to fall prey to survivorship bias, i.e. there's no guarantee that any commonalities have to do with them being *successful* rather than *internet* or *startups*. A group of unsuccessful startups would be a nice control group, and maybe then we could draw some better conclusions about what makes a startup successful. | null | 316 | null | [
424
] | null | null | null | null | null |
410 | null | comment | phil | 1,172,098,554 | bookmarklet!
I would submit more links if there was a bookmarklet that submitted the page I was on. | null | 363 | null | [
613,
4759
] | null | null | null | null | null |
416 | null | comment | pg | 1,172,100,823 | Spam actually showed up the first day. Fortunately we already had good tools for dealing with it. | null | 397 | null | [
79516
] | null | null | null | null | null |
417 | null | story | phil | 1,172,101,241 | null | null | null | null | [
464,
498
] | http://danga.com/words/2005_oscon/oscon-2005.pdf | 7 | [PDF] LiveJournal's Backend: A history of scaling | null | 2 |
404 | null | comment | gustaf | 1,172,095,198 | first impression i got was that they spammed me like 6 months after I signed up. not god | null | 347 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
406 | null | story | mattculbreth | 1,172,096,377 | null | null | null | null | null | http://blog.guykawasaki.com/2007/02/entrepreneurshi.html | 6 | Entrepreneurship Week at Stanford | null | 0 |
418 | null | comment | jwecker | 1,172,101,448 | Most of my life I would have agreed wholeheartedly. I still agree, but it's nuanced now. For the past while I've been growing a property management business on Maui, and I've discovered a demographic that the moment you say anything close to "sorry," you see them transform- they see dollar signs and suddenly they become monsters. We've had to enact a policy at our company- if you ask someone how their stay has been and they say "well, it rained a few of the days," whatever you do, _don't_ say "yah, sorry about that- too bad," even though that's the most natural thing in the world to say. If we ever said sorry to something like that some would immediately demand a refund for their stay (funny as that sounds). Only apologize for things that really are your fault. "Sorry, my fault" are magical words only when they are true (both parts). Turns out pretty much every hotel and property management in Hawaii has a "black list"- customers who they will not give a room to. Thankfully it doesn't happen nearly as often in tech. Corollary: trust your customer. | null | 127 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
412 | null | comment | byrneseyeview | 1,172,099,278 | He used the assignment operator instead of the equality operator -- is the fact that choices are headaches *all Joel Spolsky's fault*? | null | 370 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
419 | null | comment | mexicali | 1,172,101,589 | Dude, you're not right at all. There are a lot more opportunities for a PhD although there are many for a BA too. You don't have to be a physics professor if you get a PhD. | null | 401 | null | [
428
] | null | null | null | null | null |
414 | null | story | farmer | 1,172,099,875 | null | null | null | null | null | http://mikevolpe.blogspot.com/2007/02/startup-valuations-rising-who-cares.html | 3 | Mike Volpe: Are startup valuations really rising? | null | 0 |
430 | null | story | ereldon | 1,172,105,465 | null | null | null | null | null | http://commonsensej.blogspot.com/2007/02/gannett-video.html | 2 | A newspaper chain tries to innovate... looks painful. | null | 0 |
428 | null | comment | psbt | 1,172,104,619 | You could be a post-doc for 12 years until some professorship opens up in the Golan Heights. If you don't want to stay in Physics the only thing a Ph.D. is useful for is a "change career free card". You're allowed to change your career to anything but only once. | null | 419 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
422 | null | comment | jwecker | 1,172,101,942 | OK, here's the question, pg, is this site actually running on a lightweight webserver written in ARC, or did you tie ARC into apache or something for the application logic and storage? Or did you use ARC as a markup language? Just curious. | null | 194 | null | [
540
] | null | null | null | null | null |
421 | null | comment | phil | 1,172,101,843 | i think this is sort of a goofy post, but i like comment #2 quite a bit. | null | 415 | null | [
427
] | null | null | null | null | null |
425 | null | comment | bootload | 1,172,103,568 | '... Nobody at a social news site has yet figured out how to do the RSS feed right, IMO ...'
How about RSS feeds for individual users comments? Who likes checking into 'roach motels'? I don't. The number of sites I've added content /., use.perl, perlmonks, reddit only a few allow you to extract *your* insight.
'... RSS feeds are low-priority. ...'
possibly true, but why should you have to go back to a site/page when you can just grab the data & use it as you like? | null | 373 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
431 | null | comment | zekepictures | 1,172,105,665 | OK, this is my first post. I had already read this elsewhere earlier today, but funny that it's the first thing I've read after joining! I have been doing Avid tech support for over 10 years (Avid is the industry standard software for editing video/film - although that is being threatened strongly) I have been waiting for this to happen. Was wondering when someone would jump on the idea of providing in-browser editing tools for the "YouTube" crowd. Avid's a fool not to embrace this... Anyway, I want to jump in soon with the whole video on the web experience. I hope to update everyone soon over time on what my ideas are... Hope all are well and good luck! | null | 423 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
426 | null | comment | mynameishere | 1,172,103,877 | Start this trend, please:
TWO sets of arrows.
The first set indicates: Yes, I agree, or No, I don't agree.
The second set is only ONE arrow, pointing down. This means, "This comment is spam/offensive/offtopic." | null | 363 | null | [
30476
] | null | null | null | null | null |
424 | null | comment | Terror9 | 1,172,103,301 | I second that question. | null | 411 | null | [
480
] | null | null | null | null | null |
420 | null | comment | jwecker | 1,172,101,602 | Here's one: get newlines working. Either allow <br /> elements or translate the newline before applying the comment. It'll make the comments a lot more readable. I know it can be abused, but I don't think that's really a worry in this forum. You can always turn it back off later, right? | null | 390 | null | [
1173
] | null | null | null | null | null |
423 | null | story | pg | 1,172,102,423 | null | null | null | null | [
431
] | http://blogs.adobe.com/creativesolutionspr/2007/02/adobe_brings_video_editing_too.html | 1 | Adobe's take on new video editing tools at Photobucket | null | 1 |
439 | null | comment | brett | 1,172,110,435 | a list of all of a user's comments on their user page would be nice | null | 363 | null | [
2474
] | null | null | null | null | null |
427 | null | comment | Terror9 | 1,172,104,071 | rumors != useful | null | 421 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
429 | null | comment | male_salmon | 1,172,104,658 | I thought this article was about how Flex was the favored technology for RIAs (as opposed to AJAX). | null | 257 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
432 | null | story | onebeerdave | 1,172,106,702 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/02/21/pbwiki-raises-2m/ | 4 | PBWiki Raises $2m | null | 0 |
441 | null | comment | bitdiddle | 1,172,110,781 | I second that, I love the minimalist approach. Reddit was much like that in the beginning. | null | 388 | null | [
657
] | null | null | null | null | null |
435 | null | comment | jwecker | 1,172,107,559 | The first item is a verbose way of saying "Six Sigma." | null | 122 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
433 | null | comment | ashu | 1,172,106,742 | I guess it must be just me, but I think onstartups.com articles have close to zero content. | null | 339 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
437 | null | comment | reitzensteinm | 1,172,108,706 | I'd like to see the source code, or at least a part of it, to see what Arc looks like in action. | null | 363 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
438 | null | comment | pg | 1,172,109,845 | Not logging users out when we restart the server. (If you
find yourself suddenly logged out, that's why. Sorry, will fix.) | null | 363 | null | [
1172
] | null | null | null | null | null |
434 | null | comment | wastedbrains | 1,172,106,901 | I would love a save feature... I someone already said this and I missed it, my bad. I check sites like this often while I have a quick minute at work, but if I notice a really good article I want to read I don't always have time. I would like to save it so at the end of each evening I could log in just to read over things I thought looked interesting. I do this in reddit all the time, and expect that I would like doing the same here. | null | 363 | null | [
32764,
32765
] | null | null | null | null | null |
442 | null | comment | bootload | 1,172,111,094 | Had a look, read. One thing that struck me was the harsh unnecessary division between VC, Angel & Startup articles. If I'm a startup I might want to read about Angels? Looks like an aggregator for startup blogs, so there is some form of authenticity. The site is very hard to read but nothing that could not be solved with design make over.
Good to see some reddit posters here 'bio'. Enjoyed reading your posts. | null | 317 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
436 | null | story | andres | 1,172,108,231 | null | null | null | null | [
462
] | http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/02/04/google-powerpoint-clone-coming/ | 12 | Google PowerPoint Clone Coming | null | 2 |
447 | null | story | joe | 1,172,113,562 | null | null | null | null | null | http://momb.socio-kybernetics.net/ | 6 | MoMB | The Museum of Modern Betas | null | 0 |
444 | null | comment | sketerpot | 1,172,111,685 | It's possible to make a site simpler and more straightforward for users by making it prettier. Really good web design is very subtle; things like giving small but definite visual cues for where posts begin and end, or making the "reply" link a slightly different color from the post so it doesn't look like part of the post -- these small changes do more than look pretty, they also lower the cognitive load on the user and make it feel simpler.
A lot of what Reddit has been doing to their interface has been tiny changes that make it feel simpler. Good web design is something to be appreciated; great web design makes you forget that it's even there. | null | 388 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
443 | null | comment | jwecker | 1,172,111,658 | OK everyone, so what is Web 3.0 (or Enterprise 2.0 or whatever)? My bet is on xulrunner type highly responsive local apps with persistent connections to the server (which is possible with something like yaws, not really with apache). Kind of a client-server model where the server is Internet based (though, of course, no one will dare say the words client-server). | null | 168 | null | [
489
] | null | null | null | null | null |
451 | null | story | drusenko | 1,172,116,820 | null | null | null | null | null | http://valleywag.com/tech/web-2.0/ipo-fever-returns-rationally-238544.php | 2 | IPO fever returns? | null | 0 |
450 | null | comment | mattculbreth | 1,172,116,584 | Awesome. Been checking the site five times a day for months. :)
BTW the ASCII application has a few dates off. Looks like a copy/paste issue from the last application.
| null | 445 | null | [
598,
597,
596
] | null | null | null | null | null |
455 | null | comment | lupin_sansei | 1,172,120,079 | RSS feed | null | 188 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
449 | null | comment | bootload | 1,172,115,350 | there are no right or wrong choices. I find this an interesting post as I just commented on the 'involved' vs 'committed' post ~ http://tinyurl.com/2q9ut8 where a co-founder left to pursue a PhD from a startup. The key test is are they *both committed*? I also noted the potential motivators, '... no money, no job, no health insurance, and no idea if we are actually going to succeed ...', '... started counting the number of girls I would interact with on a daily basis ...'. While their situation may/may not improve on all these points the fact they are committed is a step in the right direction. Now if only I could search for AMD64 ~ http://octopart.com/search?q=AMD64 | null | 227 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
454 | null | story | lupin_sansei | 1,172,119,166 | null | null | null | null | [
485
] | http://www.perthonline.net/geochat/ | 2 | My little startup: a discussion group for every city in the world | null | 1 |
448 | null | story | drusenko | 1,172,113,697 | null | null | null | null | [
487
] | http://ajaxian.com/archives/adobe-asks-ajaxians-to-beta-test-apollo | 3 | Want to beta Apollo, Adobe's next-gen framework? | null | 1 |
446 | null | comment | pg | 1,172,113,183 | See http://ycombinator.com/s2007.html for details. The application form lives at http://news.ycombinator.com/apply.
Probably time to make urls in comments turn into links. | null | 445 | null | [
806,
559
] | null | null | null | null | null |
440 | null | comment | bootload | 1,172,110,645 | You can master your choice of ideas, technology, location. But stuff up the soft side of tech-startups (founder commitment) and you are doomed. The article has an interesting take on working out the dividing line between founders that are *involved* VS those who are *committed*. But is this a good enough test?
I found out recently the distinction between 'involved' & 'committed' when a co-founder ditched out prefering to do a Phd (in the exact same area of the product) rather go the hard yards, build a product then sell it. Why? I can only guess. The Phd route could be perceived as less risky, higher prestige over the entrepreneurial route. Maybe because all the "chicks dig Phd's in CompSci" ?
Using the above test the co-founder would pass. So how do you, "evaluate if a co-founder is committed over the entire product development timeline before any perceived payback" ?
The article fails to answer this question. | null | 104 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
452 | null | comment | amichail | 1,172,117,452 | Why are you reluctant to accept one person companies? One person is often sufficient for a workable prototype. Others can join later. In fact, Y Combinator can act as a match maker of sorts, encouraging mergers among similar proposals/prototypes.
| null | 445 | null | [
493,
583,
651,
650,
521,
461,
582
] | null | null | null | null | null |
465 | null | story | herdrick | 1,172,124,294 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.stevenlevy.com/index.php/other-books/hackers | 3 | Hackers - Heroes of the Computer Revolution (book) | null | 0 |
463 | null | comment | manuel | 1,172,123,061 | ad "7. Story that lends itself to mainstream PR":
Dabble Db used Smalltalk as initial marketing vehicle, so maybe "Story that lends itself to fringe (with fanatical users) PR" could also be a valid strategy... | null | 460 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
468 | null | comment | dougw | 1,172,125,984 | I'd like to see a list (RSS feed?) of my comments that have been replied to so that discussion can continue.
| null | 363 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
453 | null | comment | lupin_sansei | 1,172,118,692 | Yes everyone I know has bailed from reddit. Too many alarmist political , Bush bashing, boring articles. Not enough interesting tech links. | null | 259 | null | [
3570
] | null | null | null | null | null |
467 | null | comment | dougw | 1,172,125,684 | It seems like a lot of this information is pulled directly from Cal's book "Building Scalable Web Sites" (Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Building-Scalable-Web-Sites-Applications/dp/0596102356/). If you are interested in gaining some of the spoken context behind the slides, this is a great read. It was reviewed on slashdot a while back (http://books.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/07/26/1357210).
If your venture is a site that is going to eventually need to scale due to high resource consumption from individual users (whether this be storage, CPU, or database requirements) I suggest you pick up a copy of this book to know how to better address this concern during design rather than in deployment! | null | 329 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
464 | null | comment | staunch | 1,172,124,179 | Brad is definitely my biggest technical role model by far. A completely open source stack: Linux, Perl (Apache mod_perl), MySQL. Besides creating LiveJournal he created Memcached, Perlbal, MogileFS, and OpenID which power some of the biggest sites (even competitors which he is happy about). He probably holds the record for scaling on the cheap. He's also unbelievably steadfast in doing right by his users. He has lost a lot of control since selling to SixApart, but he's still working hard. His blog is super great reading for wanna-be's like me: http://brad.livejournal.com/
The way he tackles technical issues is inspiring as hell, he says "there should be X" and then hammers away non-stop until it exists.
| null | 417 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
458 | null | comment | epall | 1,172,122,276 | Wow...I was pulling for XUL to replace the Ajax mess we have today, but this Flex thing looks like a serious contender. What a concept: sane, debuggable webapps that look slick, too! | null | 257 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
461 | null | comment | Elfan | 1,172,122,545 | http://www.paulgraham.com/startupmistakes.html
1. Single Founder | null | 452 | null | [
486
] | null | null | null | null | null |
445 | null | story | pg | 1,172,112,890 | null | null | null | null | [
452,
628,
446,
816,
3490,
479,
680,
450
] | http://ycombinator.com/summer07.html | 32 | Applications open for summer 2007 YC funding | null | 55 |
470 | null | comment | herdrick | 1,172,126,216 | A new bookmarking site needs a 'Hello World' link. Can I claim I meant for this to become the 'suggestions' thread? | null | 125 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
469 | null | comment | altay | 1,172,126,034 | Hey Andres, Major Life Decisions aside, I gotta say that Octopart sounds like a pretty smart idea! Perhaps the first so-called vertical search engine that's really piqued my interest. Don't know anything about the market or competition, but on the surface it seems like a solid niche -- not a market that Google's going to go after anytime soon -- in a growth industry. And isn't hardware hacking, open source hardware, etc. supposed to be the Next Big Thing? (Tim O'Reilly's been talking about this a lot lately.) Anyways, just wanted to lend a word of support to help you tune out all the haters. Good luck! | null | 269 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
460 | null | story | manuel | 1,172,122,495 | null | null | null | null | [
463
] | http://www.startup-review.com/blog/top-7-indicators-of-consumer-internet-success.php | 3 | Top 7 indicators of consumer internet success (Startup Review) | null | 1 |
466 | null | story | chris | 1,172,125,653 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.venturebeat.com/contributors/2007/01/12/we%e2%80%99re-still-looking-to-invest-in-web-20/ | 2 | Criteria for Web 2.0 Investment | null | 0 |
456 | null | comment | staunch | 1,172,121,320 | Definitely search. I use reddit's search feature all the time to find old articles. | null | 363 | null | [
15044
] | null | null | null | null | null |
457 | null | comment | testcase | 1,172,121,779 | Maybe you should make it so you don't have to log in to read comments? Some people might not realize how easy it is to create an account...
| null | 360 | null | [
566
] | null | null | null | null | null |
472 | null | story | jeff | 1,172,130,605 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.startup-review.com/blog/hotornotcom-case-study-mixing-free-and-premium-services.php | 3 | startup review of HOTorNOT | null | 0 |
462 | null | comment | Elfan | 1,172,122,730 | Such a thing would be far more useful than the other online docs in my opinion. I can't remember if I've attended a power point presentation that didn't have technical problems of some sort. | null | 436 | null | [
471
] | null | null | null | null | null |
459 | null | story | rwalker | 1,172,122,403 | null | null | null | null | null | http://wufoo.com/blog/2006/10/09/label-placement-above-is-faster-than-side/ | 2 | Designing web forms: efficient label placement | null | 0 |
480 | null | comment | sharpshoot | 1,172,142,909 | Sounds like a good plan - putting together a wiki of unsuccessful startups and their lessons. Anyone read Boohoo? the story of Boo.com? | null | 424 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
471 | null | comment | JMiao | 1,172,127,517 | Agreed. I distinctly remember -- and am sad to admit -- having to get around annoying font disparities by screen capturing parts of my slides and pasting them as images. Go figure. | null | 462 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
481 | null | comment | sharpshoot | 1,172,144,710 | This is more a content issue but to really build the community is have more fully fledged profiles - with location, bio - make it one or two lines max and a website or blog link. If we are what we think/read then it would be a great starting point in finding cofounders or people who are on the same wavelength.
I would also agree on seeing the latest comments - and maybe highlighting posts which you've commented on/ or submitted showing if there were new comments that you haven't read. So show "7 comments | 3 new" so it would be easy to come back to your home page and see how the discussion has evolved. | null | 367 | null | [
520,
3361,
2628,
964
] | null | null | null | null | null |
473 | null | comment | papersmith | 1,172,133,578 | Damn it Paul, you beat me to it. I slapped together a reddit clone last summer in reaction to its diluting startup content, but I went on to travel for a month and have been procrastinating from finishing it up ever since. Nevertheless, I really appreciate that you are opening this to public. | null | 189 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
475 | null | story | phil | 1,172,134,122 | null | null | null | null | [
476
] | http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/02/21/google-launches-apps-premier/ | 11 | Google Apps Premier | null | 2 |
476 | null | comment | phil | 1,172,134,346 | so at a first glance, the list of features seems to mostly be about better support and gmail features. | null | 475 | null | [
609
] | null | null | null | null | null |
474 | null | comment | brett | 1,172,133,782 | Bare bones API-like stuff could go a long way. Add a url parameter to the submit page that prefills the url field and anyone can create a bookmarklet for submitting. Add a status page that takes a url and returns whether or not it is in the system, its current rating and the id to pass in for modding and someone's on their way to a low rent firefox extension. | null | 363 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
478 | null | comment | vikram | 1,172,135,652 | Though restricting the site to invitation only isn't a good idea.
Letting people invite friends that they know would be interested
from inside the site would be convenient. | null | 363 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
482 | null | story | sharpshoot | 1,172,145,844 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.trizle.com/blueprint/ | 2 | Archive at Trizoko - some pretty interesting startup articles | null | 0 |
477 | null | comment | papersmith | 1,172,135,343 | >I up-voted a comment by mistake and there doesn't seem to be a way to remove my vote
It'd also be nice to have ajax for voting, so we don't have to re-scroll to find where we left off. | null | 292 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
479 | null | comment | vikram | 1,172,138,781 | Paul there seems to be a bug. I've been just entering some stuff in the application and it seems it forgets the answers that I entered for the last few questions. It also seems to be truncating answers. I entered 1 month and it truncated that to 1 mon. Is there a restriction to the length of the entire application? | null | 445 | null | [
617,
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] | null | null | null | null | null |
487 | null | comment | mattculbreth | 1,172,151,180 | Cool, I'll be interested in people's opinions here. I've been unable to determine how much of Apollo will required/be based on Flash, or if it's entirely HTML/Javascript. I just can't seem to get into Flash-based UIs, as nice as they can be. Something about them seems very constricting to me, as if I'm not really using the web anymore.
| null | 448 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
485 | null | comment | Nick_Smith | 1,172,150,019 | Perhaps you have heard of www.craigslist.org | null | 454 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
483 | null | comment | ced | 1,172,147,417 | "Allen Morgan said that people have started forgetting that building a company takes at least 5 years."
That seems awfully long. If the goal is to sell the startup before it becomes "a company", won't the average time be quite shorter? | null | 278 | null | [
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484 | null | comment | sharpshoot | 1,172,148,010 | Paul, in that instance as a way to identify smart people it makes a lot of sense for it not to be invite only. <p>But it has triggered my thinking about how to create dense communities around diverse knowledge areas. So it would be cool to do this with scientific papers and get people to register with university email addresses to generate trust and preserve fidelity. I know digg and reddit are pretty mainstream but allowing people to create specific knowledge networks on this platform would be cool. Where its an industry group or networking organisation it would be a great way to pool knowledge and if need be preserve the value of the information by requiring users to be trusted by at least one person. | null | 360 | null | [
1980
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489 | null | comment | acgourley | 1,172,157,465 | Do you really have to think about the Web in discreet chunks to talk about the future? Besides if you really want to define "web 2.0" (which always maybes me shudder) its more about the average person contributing content; it's not about the technology that enabled it. | null | 443 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
486 | null | comment | amichail | 1,172,150,886 | http://www.miketaber.net/articles/TheSingleFounderMyth.aspx | null | 461 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
492 | null | comment | jgamman | 1,172,160,336 | i think the hirers forgot that they are also being interviewed. not one of them seemed to feel that they needed to do anything other than allow the anointed one through the front door.
that being said, it seems as though each person selects people based on a wide range of criteria - i think the portfolio idea is probably the best, especially if other good programmers say they're good. Q is doing open source work the equivalent of building a portfolio with the benefit of allowing other programmers to rate your stuff? | null | 286 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
491 | null | comment | aglarond | 1,172,159,208 | Good article and informative comments. They underline my own current concerns - working on a startup while working full-time to support a family... I know chances for success are slim because most would say I'm not "committed". But I have faith in my idea, and I keep working toward my goals. I get discouraged when I see other startups with similar ideas, but that also shows me that I'm on the right track and the market is ripe. | null | 104 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
488 | null | comment | mynameishere | 1,172,155,698 | It's too bad. Javascript-in-the-browser and Ajax are both nasty hacks that force programmers to do all sorts of shameful things. And the result is--wanky html tricks. Java, for its faults, is fairly clean when run in the applet environment. It has every superiority over JITBAJAX, except for install issues and a chunky load process. Yahoo games seems like just about the only applet success story.
Of course, back in the day, non-trivial Applets tended to be too large for the dial-up accounts people had. At least that is changed. | null | 257 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
490 | null | story | bhalligan | 1,172,158,383 | null | null | null | null | null | http://www.smallbusinesshub.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/1217/Even-Billboards-Are-Dynamic-Why-Is-Your-Website-Set-In-Stone.aspx | 4 | Even Billboards Are Dynamic...Why Is Your Website Set In Stone? | null | 0 |
493 | null | comment | omarish | 1,172,162,565 | Amichail, I know exactly what you mean. Some people work better on their own. But even if you're looking for a founder, there are some places where you're out of luck. I go to the University of Virginia, and to tell you the truth, it's nearly impossible to find good hackers to work on startups with (even though 50% of Reddit went here). And without that, there's no hope getting into something as prestigious as the YCombinator.<p>I propose we make a simple site that allows hackers find one another, locally. A single hacker isn't going to make a Meetup group to find other hackers; that takes too much work. It should be more like Craigslist, but for this startup community. Sorted by city, people can exchange email addresses, screen names, and most importantly, ideas. <p>All it takes is two founders, and you never know what kind of matches people will find. <p>Granted, they should know that they can work together before taking on a huge project, but I think that something of this sort will really help people discover one another and get their startups going.<p>I'm not suggesting we re-invent Craigslist, but there are enough people here to merit something like this. Ruby on Rails, anybody? | null | 452 | null | [
700,
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494 | null | comment | kf | 1,172,162,577 | Paul Graham has backpedaled from one of the initial goals of Y Combinator, funding companies with no lower-bound for the age of founders.
With the publication of this essay, http://www.paulgraham.com/mit.html, he has backpedaled from that stance because of his personal moral culpability for encouraging people to become drop-outs. So if you are seeking Y Combinator funding and are a current undergraduate, tell Paul Graham that you are dropping out to start the company regardless of whether or not he funds you. | null | 267 | null | [
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495 | null | story | wbornor | 1,172,162,970 | null | null | null | null | [
844,
786,
612,
835,
606
] | http://simon.incutio.com/notes/2006/summit/schachter.txt | 61 | Notes from Del.icio.us founder Joshua Schachter | null | 14 |
496 | null | story | wbornor | 1,172,163,094 | null | null | null | null | null | http://feednut.com/ | 2 | Easiest and Most Intuitive Feed Reader, Feednut.com | null | 0 |
497 | null | comment | sharpshoot | 1,172,163,145 | hey omarish - i'm in on this. Shoot me an email. Sumon [at] zintilla [dot] com | null | 493 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
499 | null | comment | awt | 1,172,163,254 | There are plenty of girls if you're willing to make the drive to Berkelely | null | 380 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |
515 | null | story | onebeerdave | 1,172,169,689 | null | null | null | null | null | http://valleywag.com/tech/blind-items/guess-the-mystery-paranoid-entreprenuer-238808.php | 2 | Guess this mystery paranoid entrepreneur | null | 0 |
502 | null | comment | omarish | 1,172,164,744 | Very good idea. We can assume most people here are in the startup community.
So perhaps there should be a search by location field on a page here so that people can find each other. | null | 501 | null | null | null | null | null | null | null |