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amichail
1,172,600,498
I really like the photosynth idea: http://labs.live.com/photosynth. But can we take this idea further? For example, what can we do with video? Maybe we could put together many people's videos to produce a dynamic 3d world? One could imagine allowing people to watch and explore events in 3d such as concerts and spor...
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amichail
1,172,600,711
I think it would be interesting to provide a way to give people advice in real-time via the web. For example, you might watch a sports game on the web and give advice to individual players about what they might do next in real-time. So the spectators replace the coaches here.
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amichail
1,172,600,262
I'm interested in novel uses of prediction markets. For example, one can create an online dating service where people bet on whom they believe would make good couples. People might then take this as a suggestion as to whom to consider for a date. A similar thing can be done with business relationships, academic col...
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danielha
1,172,601,385
If you have a second rate product, then good advertising can only do so much.<p>This is an age of rapid communication. Word of mouth has never been so valuable. A good word for your product will reach millions in a very short time span. <p>But I disagree with you about web ads. Web ads will continue to be viable and va...
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danielha
1,172,601,626
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http://www.johnchow.com/index.php/the-internets-biggest-google-whores/
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The Internet&#39;s eight biggest Google AdSense publishers
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hwork
1,172,601,861
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http://www.stevenberlinjohnson.com/2007/02/our_new_investo.html
2
outside.in joins up with 3 VCs, Steven Berlin Johnson talks about why
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amichail
1,172,602,086
I am interested in seeing what happens when you apply intentional programming to web search:<p>http://youtube.com/watch?v=tSnnfUj1XCQ<p>http://youtube.com/watch?v=ZZDwB4-DPXE<p>The idea is to open up your search engine so that anyone can submit code for domain specific query entry, search, ranking, and presentation of ...
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timg
1,172,605,436
I put a lot of thought (and some actual code) into this exact idea! I put up a fast demo of it and it is rather popular.. I&#39;m interested in developing this idea further.
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jamiequint
1,172,603,004
it is apparent from this article that the author is a lot more familiar with Django than Rails and misses a lot of things. (e.g. I haven&#39;t seen a project in the last year that uses salted hash login generator - acts_as_authenticated is great - and there are admin interfaces available as plugins that are similar to ...
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timg
1,172,606,807
Interesting stuff. I&#39;ve some similar ideas on how this should be done.
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danielha
1,172,602,078
For all intents and purposes, I found it all to be completely still relevant.
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joshwa
1,172,607,045
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http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/294-fireside-chat-skinnycorp-threadless-and-connected-ventures-vimeo-part-1-of-2
3
37signals chat with founders of skinnyCorp (Threadless) &#38; Connected Ventures (Vimeo)
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timg
1,172,605,203
Done this recently with good success. Great fun. Many conversations have gone on for over 1k and even 10k messages. It&#39;s still seeing a good amount of action. Anyone interested in developing this idea or the framework further? Let me know.
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nostrademons
1,172,605,970
In a good OS (I believe Linux qualifies), you only need to save the contents of the registers. Each process has its own address space, each thread has its own stack, and so there&#39;s no need to much around with memory beyond that. Stacks aren&#39;t actually copied around, the processor simply restores %esp and %ebp...
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pixcavator
1,172,609,788
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http://pixcavator.com
2
Image mining
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palish
1,172,608,434
That&#39;s a really cool idea. I doubt it could be turned into a successful business, but I love synergy effects.
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ecuzzillo
1,172,609,090
It seems to me that things like this have been done in academia for a while; because I&#39;ve only seen a video (rather than, say, some code or a paper), I&#39;m unsure exactly what Dexter is doing, and whether it&#39;s different from the stuff done with bipeds at CMU, MIT, or in Japan. I wonder if there is any more in...
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timg
1,172,608,202
I would say that reddit *created* it&#39;s startup oriented niche to a large degree - Particularly for college and maybe even highschool guys who know computers well but never seriously considered starting a company so soon.<p>In this regard I think of the early reddit and now n.yc more of as clubs, like the acm club I...
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timg
1,172,608,387
It&#39;s starting to look like they got lucky once, and won&#39;t be finding any more ground-breaking features. I&#39;m just saying.
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nostrademons
1,172,608,257
That&#39;s what PHP/MySQL are for. ;-)
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jadams
1,172,614,046
Gah! Why do I keep double-posting? Someone please delete this.
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volida
1,172,613,269
similar implementations<p>talkito (YC funded) will do something similar<p>blogeverywhere.com (by the founder of Hotmail)<p>chatsum.com<p>Yoono.com
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jimream
1,172,613,245
In my opinion Facebook and Myspace are easily worth 5 billion each. Just because of the fact that if they were to significantly add features that would pave the way for future e-commerce and social bookmarking they could start with a tremendous amount of base users.<p>However, I feel that even the leaders Google, Face...
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altay
1,172,609,900
Incredible!! Congrats, Trevor!<p>Now, if you&#39;ll excuse me, I need to go prepare my bunker for the coming War with the Machines.
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amichail
1,172,611,381
I am interested in giving people ways to track their influence on others. Forwarding Tree&#39;s URL tracking is all about that: http://groups.google.com/group/forwarding-tree/browse_thread/thread/ad998b99b9e3b7a8<p>URL tracking allows you to see what happens to those URLs that you forward to others, post on your blog, ...
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ecuzzillo
1,172,614,730
I&#39;m in a class on the subject at CMU, so I should be able to find out. What you said about Asimo is not quite true; for instance, one guy here at CMU wrote some code that took Asimo and constantly replanned in real time, so that he could respond to various changes in the environment dynamically.<p>Here, for instanc...
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msgbeepa
1,172,610,368
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http://www.avinio.blogspot.com/2007/02/how-to-get-rich-from-making-video.html
1
How To Become Rich From Making A Simple Video - Part 1
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jimream
1,172,612,481
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[ 1426, 1431 ]
http://www.tbo.com/news/nationworld/MGBMKYZOKYE.html
1
What do you think are the &#34;real&#34; values of the hottest web companies?
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volida
1,172,613,300
similar implementations<p>talkito (YC funded) will do something similar blogeverywhere.com (by the founder of Hotmail) chatsum.com Yoono.com
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eli
1,172,615,782
How many nodes would have to be compromised to make this a viable attack vecotr? (yeah, yeah, I know, I should RTFM)
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amichail
1,172,610,285
What about advertising using smart mobs? A web service would allow a company to specify the logistics of the event and how much it is willing to pay. The company could also track the event in real-time and make changes as required. Advertising could be subtle such as in the form of a mob that forms in a shopping center...
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pg
1,172,613,839
Really? Do you have a reference?
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[ 1433, 1435 ]
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jadams
1,172,615,505
Sony claims that Qrio can respond to outside pushing, as here: <p>http://www.plyojump.com/movies/qrio/sdr-4x_recoverfromfall.mpg
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eli
1,172,616,878
I just wanted to emphasize how important this is to building a dialog (and a community!). I don't want people replying to my comments, so right now I basically have to bookmark each thread that I've commented on and remember to come back and check.
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pg
1,172,613,923
this is a duplicate submission
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brett
1,172,621,326
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[ 1499, 1467, 1470 ]
http://earthcode.com/blog/2007/02/four_mongrels_digg_and_lifehac.html
11
high traffic rails performance data point (hotspotr.com)
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socmoth
1,172,617,136
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[ 1447 ]
http://gr.ayre.st/~grayrest/animator/animator.html
14
MochiKit.Animator with demos (the end is the best)
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shankys
1,172,615,960
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http://www.sun.com/2006-0113/feature/index.html
2
Sun cofounders talk about what founding Sun was like [video]
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eli
1,172,616,751
I love subversion, but it's not really a great tool for everyday backups unless you really need to be able to recover every single prior version of a file (and even then...). I think something like Unison or rsync would be better for most backup uses.
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jadams
1,172,613,655
&#62; [...] Dexter appears to be treating each step as a discrete unit, where it has to attain balance at the end of one step before going on to the next step<p>I doubt that. I don&#39;t think that would qualify as dynamic balance. Remember, it&#39;s only been a couple of weeks since Dexter&#39;s first step -- he&#39;s...
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eli
1,172,615,181
This is a Holy War, but that comparison seems as good as any.
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snowmaker
1,172,625,496
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http://earlystagevc.typepad.com/earlystagevc/2007/01/fail_fast_fail_.html
10
Venture capitalist's explanation of why small software startups are taking larger amounts of VC
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msgbeepa
1,172,622,095
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http://www.avinio.blogspot.com/2007/02/dimdim-open-source-web-conferencing.html
1
Open Source web conferencing
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brett
1,172,620,633
isn't part of the whole point that the thing scales up or down as you need it to? so, yeah, if you know up front what kind of constant bandwidth/storage/cpu load you are going to need then you're in a really good position to shop around for a better deal.
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bkmrkr
1,172,627,511
timg I was doing something similar, could you im me: gg@uptoolate.org
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palish
1,172,620,281
Now I'm interested to know what it was.
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papersmith
1,172,619,105
I'm leaning toward Rails because I've been using it since its early stage. I also wrote stuffs in Django just out of curiosity, and it feels just as good. I think they're both highly productive environments, and with the time it takes to read all the comparison articles, we could've written entire apps.
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palish
1,172,623,065
I found writing something like this to be one of the natural steps in a pure javascript client. People can do a lot more than they realize with javascript. On my website, http://www.classbug.com , the fade effects, the transition effects, and the disclosure button rotations are all done with an animating value from 0...
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jamiequint
1,172,631,740
Rails, but I can't judge Django because I haven't played with it on more than a superficial level. It seems like it really comes down to preference. I love the Ruby (and Rails) community right now and there are a lot of hopes for Ruby 1.9 as far as speed goes (supposedly an order of magnitude faster than 1.8.5).
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jamiequint
1,172,632,070
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http://www.knowhr.com/blog/2006/08/21/top-10-best-presentations-ever/
3
10 Best Presentations Ever (as ranked by KnowHR)
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jamiequint
1,172,632,185
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[ 1460, 1528 ]
http://blog.guykawasaki.com/2006/01/the_top_ten_lie.html
10
Top 10 Lies of Venture Capitalists - Guy Kawasaki
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AlfredNgeno
1,172,619,841
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http://advisorgarage.wordpress.com/2007/01/16/to-vc-or-not-to-vc-that-is-the-question/
2
To VC or Not to VC? That is the Question...
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mattculbreth
1,172,631,719
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[ 1461, 1458, 1471, 1538 ]
http://p-cos.blogspot.com/2007/02/what-is-point-of-macros.html
14
Example of Lisp Macros
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snowmaker
1,172,625,640
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http://earlystagevc.typepad.com/earlystagevc/2006/09/vc_20_not_so_se.html
2
Venture capital 2.0 - how venture capital is ceasing to be a separate asset class and being managed by larger general private equity firms
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jwecker
1,172,634,523
Nice. I like the followup even more ( http://blog.guykawasaki.com/2006/01/the_top_ten_lie_1.html ). I'm sure all of these are just as applicable now as when he wrote them. It all boils down to genuine confidence in your product. If you're truly confident (not just optimistic, which we should be also) you won't get ...
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jamiequint
1,172,632,960
Networking is a vital part of being successful in the business world, connections and human capital can be just as important as cash and intellectual capital. What tools (e.g. email, notebook, post its) do you use to manage your interactions with people, and how do you use this information to further develop your relat...
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mattculbreth
1,172,632,585
Not a bad explanation of macros. I'm not experienced enough here to really judge how good, but I grokked it at least. It does seem though that you an approach this type of power with some of the dynamic features of Python. Am I wrong here? I think it's likely I'm missing the subtlety of macros.
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hwork
1,172,635,429
37Signals' Highrise -- not out yet -- could prove to be a good way of doing it. I can say that I'm certainly excited. Check out the preview post here:<p>http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/265-preview-1-an-introduction-to-highrise-the-product-previously-known-as-sunrise
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juwo
1,172,635,923
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[ 1486, 1469, 1572 ]
http://juwo-works.blogspot.com/
2
Have you experienced the customer-investor-team conundrum?
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jamiequint
1,172,632,537
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[ 1507, 1459, 1462, 1463 ]
2
Networking: How do you manage your network and stay in touch with your key contacts?
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jamiequint
1,172,632,339
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http://pinkomarketing.pbwiki.com/Marketing%20in%20the%20Post-Cluetrain%20Era
2
Pinko Marketing - Marketing in the Post-Cluetrain Era
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ecuzzillo
1,172,635,218
This is not startup news. We need downmods for this purpose. (I love Lisp, but this is not a Lisp forum.)
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[ 1468, 1487, 1508, 1635 ]
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smackaysmith
1,172,629,731
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http://www.socialcustomer.com/2007/02/prereqs_for_set.html
1
Prerequisites For Setting Up A Business-Driven Web 2.0 Effort
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jamiequint
1,172,636,147
Thanks for the link Elfan, I'm already a part of LinkedIn, but I think it is more of a tool for visualizing your connections not managing relationships. What do you think?
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[ 1473 ]
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jamiequint
1,172,636,324
Some people are claiming even higher performance than this using nginx ( a relatively new Russian webserver). The preferred Rails "business" host EngineYard is using this right now.
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[ 1584 ]
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Elfan
1,172,635,873
There happens to be a social networking site for old fashion networking. http://www.linkedin.com/
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[ 1466 ]
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jamiequint
1,172,636,046
yeah I've been following that, the reason I asked this question is I've been working on a product since November that is doing something similar (I was hoping that 37 Signals' product was going to be more CRM-ish) I still think (from what 37 Signals shown so far) that there is still a tool that caters more towards indi...
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brett
1,172,636,489
Language choice and thusly features of given languages are pretty pertinent to hackers trying to start startups. <p>Just don't upmod it. If you're lucky it will go away.
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[ 1530 ]
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juwo
1,172,636,499
If you can read my burnout article at the link above, then perhaps you can tell me if the Startup Story seems like a fairy tale - true for a few, but not for the unwashed masses. <p>(My website is at http://juwo.com. there's not much detail, as NP is not yet released. Potential competitors? dabble.com, veotag.com).
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hwork
1,172,636,858
Just added my local hotspots. Pretty cool stuff.
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papersmith
1,172,636,872
Maybe this submission is a bit off topic, but I'd love to see more Lisp code for clever hacks of pratical applications.
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Elfan
1,172,639,545
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http://spineworks.com/public/jones/jones.htm
1
"Success comes from good judgment, good judgment comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgment." - Arthur Jones, founder of Nautilus and MedX
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jamiequint
1,172,642,186
I think some of this can be attributed towards Rails developers - like me :) - liking the framework so much that they want to share the joy with everyone else.
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bootload
1,172,641,249
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[ 1511 ]
http://tlb.org/busywork.html
5
The best qualities of high- and low-level languages
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Elfan
1,172,640,006
I'm in college so I don't have that many direct connections and its how I have managed to stay in contact with people from summer work. I'm not sure how it will scale for me in the future.<p>But I'm *awful* at maintaining friendships, networks, and things for that nature. So I'm not a good person to take advice from ...
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jamiequint
1,172,640,622
I'm in college too, actually, I've found facebook to be a good networking tool, especially some of the the global groups (there are a few good entrepreneurship ones), I've made some interesting connections through it.
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vegashacker
1,172,644,475
I'm rusty on my Python, but I'd have to guess that no, Python's dynamic features don't get you the kind of power that Pascal's talking about. The key thing to realize is that any particular feature that your language has doesn't necessarily matter. For example, Python may happend to have a built-in way of doing<p>(wi...
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bootload
1,172,644,000
Not a bad article, bit light on Rails though. <p>INTERESTING QUOTES: '... although there is no reason why fastcgi couldn’t be used ...' ~ except it's slower! ~ http://superjared.com/entry/quick-django-benching. '... here is no equivalent of a model-specific SQL refresh – something that could drop a specific model’s tab...
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jamiequint
1,172,647,294
+1 for Ruby for Rails, one of the best programming books I've read in a while.
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danielha
1,172,647,950
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http://www.shuzak.com/
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A social network for geeks? (Shuzak)
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jamiequint
1,172,646,453
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http://www.stevepavlina.com/blog/2006/07/10-reasons-you-should-never-get-a-job/
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Reasons You Should Never Get a Job
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vegashacker
1,172,645,018
Better display of source code in comments
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vegashacker
1,172,645,093
Something like a "code" tag that you can put around sections of your comment, and within these tags, the formatting will be left alone. This is supposed to be a technical news site after all, so I think this should be pretty high-priority. Thanks!
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danielha
1,172,648,136
I submitted to pose a question: Is there a demand for a geek-specific social network? I understand niche networks, but I don't know if this could be a viable community in itself. I understand geeks -- I AM a geek. But if I wanted to join a social network, a complete network full of all types of people is what I would b...
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danielha
1,172,651,841
Without going into the detail of the article (I wouldn't want to spoil it for you!): a lot.<p>But you know how it is. A single proof of insecurity is all you really need.
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pg
1,172,651,372
It makes you register to even see anything. What were they thinking?
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danielha
1,172,651,685
That was one of my initial reactions when I came across the site.<p>Clicking one of their navigational buttons will open you up to the rest of the site. Still, there isn't anything engaging about it, though it definitely demonstrates how Reddit-like the design is!<p>Having mandatory registration would just be... well, ...
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danielha
1,172,650,721
It's not easy. It might not be a fairy tale, but tantamount to the American dream. Not everyone makes it. But that simple fact makes the journey an absolute thrill.<p>I admire your efforts. I can't say much for your product at this point since I could not locate a proper demonstration on your site. If you think you hav...
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danielha
1,172,651,452
Ha! A true testament to the efficiency of both frameworks.
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danielha
1,172,651,116
This page is for the community of entrepreneurs -- or more specifically, hackers with startup ambitions. <p>That said, there are many who are interested in the topic (me included) as demonstrated by the comments.<p>Relax and upmod the submissions that you like. News is only as relevant as the community decides. :)
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aglarond
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http://www.digbusiness.com/blog/archives/going_back_to_the_brick_yard.html
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Going Back to the Brick Yard
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danielha
1,172,652,542
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http://onstartups.com/home/tabid/3339/bid/1109/Startups-vs-The-Big-Guys-The-Power-Of-Caring-For-Customers.aspx
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Startups vs. The Big Guys: The Power Of Caring For Customers
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socmoth
1,172,652,611
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http://www.flickr.com/photos/socialmoth/405517122/in/set-72157594561460322/
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Ycombinator, the inside scoop
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danielha
1,172,652,973
The article reminds me of Paul Graham's "The Hardest Lessons..." presentation done at Startup School 06 (I viewed that here: http://startupschool.infogami.com/) about making users happy.<p>Users may be accustomed to getting their requests and opinions thrown into a pile of ignored requests. And this is where a startup ...
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Harj
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http://macenstein.com/default/archives/540
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Using Safari can slow your system down as much as 76% vs Firefox
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Harj
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http://blogs.business2.com/beta/2007/02/why_valley_vcs_.html
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Why Valley Vcs are Like the Mob
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kul
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http://lukewarmtapioca.com/2007/2/27/giveth-before-you-taketh
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Giveth before you taketh
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danielha
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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/software_for_virtual_teams.php#more
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Software for Virtual Teams -- A set of tools to replace the traditional office
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neilc
1,172,657,444
A site that does 61,000 page views/day is by no means "high traffic", especially if you're distributing that load over 4 machines. Somewhat interesting post, but this is still a pretty limited demonstration of rails scalability.
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parlin
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http://www.twingly.se/ScreenSaver.aspx
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3D visualisation of blog posts by Twingly
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