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7,839
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domp
1,175,363,758
null
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[ 7841 ]
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/31/magnifynet-different-than-the-video-crowd/
2
Magnify is bringing a new approach to video sites
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1
7,825
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comment
dpapathanasiou
1,175,357,424
Quoting no. 6: "So a lot of clients have been recently asking their ad agencies, 'So what can you do for us in Web 2.0?' And the agencies have been replying, 'Lots! Lots and lots and lots and lots!' Bullshit. Ad agencies have so far been hopeless in this space."<p>An opportunity awaits.
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jcwentz
1,175,358,810
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http://www.daitengu.com/2007/03/30/mysqlhotcopy-backup-script/
1
MySQLHotCopy backup script
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0
7,850
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comment
gibsonf1
1,175,365,814
Many of the strategies being used by successful web 2.0 companies were pioneered decades ago by Toyota, now called Lean Management (and Lean Consumption).<p>Key Principles for Success (50% less effort, 80% higher quality): (From www.lean.org)<p>+Focus on Customer Value<p>+Eliminate Waste: Identify all the steps in the ...
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Wintermute
1,175,367,066
Well, it isn't really all that satisfying, but I've taken to tutoring, specifically SAT tutoring. This has good points ($40-$50 / hour, not very difficult) and it has bad points (relatively mindless, highly repetitive, can be a lot of driving). Still, it is a flexible solution to a very stressful problem. <p><p>
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amichail
1,175,361,692
There's something about X-plane that is super addictive. You will never get bored of it! Here are some cool X-plane videos:<p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HFpp1zRrDfg">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HFpp1zRrDfg</a><p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXcCAsu9Odk">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXcCAs...
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inklesspen
1,175,365,429
Someone's already mentioned Y Combinator. But YC isn't the only place you could go for funding. There are angel investors and VC groups all over the map. What you have to do is put together something that convinces these people that not investing in you now is leaving money on the table. Don't worry about failure to ge...
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domp
1,175,360,918
If tons of more things are running off of radio waves how bad would that impact our health? Any ideas?
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zaidf
1,175,365,567
Looks awesome!
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zaidf
1,175,364,418
My cofounder works this way and I have all the respect for him for being able to carry this out without it having an impact on our development. <p>Still you have to be very careful it does not take your focus away at any point. My partner had freelanced before so he knew what kind of projects to take and not take. Best...
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inklesspen
1,175,369,287
I am a little surprised they get this much performance out of Java. But I guess if you know it like the back of your hand, you can make it fly.
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7,859
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[ 7875 ]
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dfranke
1,175,372,635
But how many of them would take Techstars? Giving away 5% of my equity for $10000 is a pretty marginal decision without the advice and connections that come with it, and I've yet to see that TechStars has any advice that isn't plaigarized from your essays. Being forced to be based in Boulder pretty much puts me under...
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mattculbreth
1,175,368,561
Aren't these the dudes that plagiarized YC's application (and maybe entire business model)? Sure you want to do business with them?
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zaidf
1,175,369,929
I think it's April Fools. You can read the details here: <a href="http://www.zaid360.com/?p=110">http://www.zaid360.com/?p=110</a>
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febeling
1,175,370,602
What does the "Delete that text from your homepage" line refer to? I cant interpret that from any of the essays. Does Paul encourage to remove bad prose from blogs to startuppers? Or does he advise not to say "What you cant say?"
null
7,554
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[ 7879 ]
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comment
inklesspen
1,175,370,299
Yeah, Python is great.<p>But it doesn't give you the live preview in browser, does it? :D
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story
zaidf
1,175,368,472
null
null
null
null
[ 7878, 7866, 7920, 7868, 7967 ]
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/31/techcrunch-has-acquired-fuckedcompanycom/
7
April Fools? TechCrunch acquires FuckedCompany - what's next?
null
7
7,880
null
comment
jward
1,175,372,177
You're making the assumption the majority of people want insightful and informative. The fact that there is a huge market for content like Survivor and Fear Factor makes me doubt this assumption.<p>I'd say that Reddit has more to worry about from niche copycats than another large site. Why go to Reddit for your celeb...
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7,863
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comment
ced
1,175,369,176
Does it worry you when working on Arc? Do you think you could have done better when you were 25?
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7,368
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7,853
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comment
danielha
1,175,366,406
A Google Presently is in the works. I'm don't know the differences in approach compared with Zenter, but we should find out more as Google formally announces Presently and Zenter opens up a bit more to the public.
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vlad
1,175,369,613
null
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null
[ 7921, 7886, 7914, 7983 ]
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn7915&feedId=online-news_rss20
3
Most Scientific research papers are probably wrong
null
4
7,845
null
comment
zaidf
1,175,364,574
Y acceptance isn't announced till 29th? I thought it was till 22nd?<p>"# We'll review applications by April 10 and invite the groups that seem most promising to meet us in Mountain View on the weekend of April 21-22. We'll reimburse up to $500 per group for travel expenses.<p># We'll decide who to fund that weekend, a...
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domp
1,175,369,441
"Entrepreneurs with new ideas will always have a way to reach potential users and customers. They just won't be able to do it here any more."<p>Are they trying to just become a regular news outlet then? It seems like a bad move on their part to abandon the entrepreneurs and startups that made them what they are today.<...
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7,861
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[ 7894 ]
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comment
brett
1,175,371,222
I remember reading this a while back. Sounds like a good data point for Paul Buchheit's Startup School point about memory vs disks.
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comment
zaidf
1,175,370,053
We went with an Inc. since we had three of us with stakes and knew the number of people would only increase.<p>Make sure you go with Delaware in most cases.
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Tichy
1,175,371,086
So many companies out there seem to have really crappy products, therefore I am convinced that you can be successful with anything. It just takes the right kind of sticking to it.
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sdavis0830
1,175,372,297
My sites achieve about .20% CTR as well. How is everyone else doing?
null
7,855
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[ 7912 ]
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dfranke
1,175,371,452
"Also, the current trend in blogging, led by Valleywag and others, is to 'go negative first, and ask questions later.' That tabloid-style journalism tends to generate a lot of eyeballs and, subsequently, advertiser dollars. This is something we just can't compete with. By acquiring FC, we can go more negative faster ...
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7,875
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comment
Tichy
1,175,370,815
Just curious, what else than Java would you use for performance, save for C or Lisp? I know the YC folks don't appreciate it, but actually Java has it's merits. Last comparison I looked at, Java was 6 times slower than C, with only LISP being faster and not being C. Scripting languages like Python or Perl are a factor ...
null
7,864
null
[ 7883, 9014, 7933 ]
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7,873
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amichail
1,175,370,673
Any takers? What sort of technologies would you use?<p><a href="http://texmacs.org">http://texmacs.org</a>
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[ 7891 ]
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danielha
1,175,367,534
The challenge is in creating something with near-instant gratification while maintaining substance.<p>Usually it's hard enough to get a high demand hit, so we concentrate on just that. If we can achieve that part, we can then worry about not becoming a short-lived flavor du jour. It's there that we evaluate the differe...
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danielha
1,175,368,225
null
null
null
null
[ 7877, 7906, 7864 ]
http://mailinator.blogspot.com/2007/01/architecture-of-mailinator.html
37
The Architecture of Mailinator - averaging 4.5million emails a day on a single 2Ghz machine
null
11
7,836
null
story
joshuaHatfield
1,175,361,246
null
null
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null
null
http://startupjourney.blogspot.com/2007/03/start-up-cliches-by-sanjay-anandaram.html
3
Start-up cliches - By Sanjay Anandaram
null
0
7,874
null
story
louisadekoya
1,175,370,765
null
null
null
null
[ 7876 ]
http://www.ideatagging.com/good-entrepreneurs-always-accept-no-for-an-answer/
1
Good Entrepreneurs Always Accept NO For An Answer
null
1
7,872
null
story
amichail
1,175,370,656
null
null
null
null
[ 7873 ]
1
Port this to the web and you will have the most advanced online word processor by far
null
2
7,854
null
story
chandrab
1,175,366,587
null
null
null
null
[ 7892, 7896, 7898, 7885 ]
http://infolab.stanford.edu/~backrub/google.html
21
The research paper that launched the Google empire
null
4
7,857
null
story
brett
1,175,367,153
null
null
null
null
[ 8007 ]
http://avc.blogs.com/a_vc/2007/03/thinking_about_.html
8
A VC: Thinking About Online Photo Services
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1
7,879
null
comment
dfranke
1,175,371,862
The entire gag is inspired by this comment: <a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=6709">http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=6709</a>
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domp
1,175,363,970
This Magnify video site looks great. I see a lot of promise with websites being able to create their own video page for their niche market.
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comment
byronsalty
1,175,373,097
I'm having trouble using drakma to hit the site. I'm pretty new to Lisp so I'm still learning what I'm looking at, however it looks like something in the stream from the server (possibly while reading headers?) is messing up CHUNGA:READLINE<i> which Drakma uses.
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dfranke
1,175,373,407
Of course, we're being told this by a research paper.
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amichail
1,175,373,315
It's interesting that most web 2.0 services do not appear deep in any theoretical sense. In particular, 99% probably do not have anything that comes even close to the sophistication behind the PageRank algorithm.<p>But still, some web 2.0 services have become very popular.<p>It seems that if you do not have any sophis...
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Tichy
1,175,373,977
OK, not the right place for that discussion. The reason languages like python are inherently slower is that they are not strongly typed. It seems only LISP is getting it right, I think there you can voluntarily use strong typing, allowing for dramatic speed improvements - why don't any other languages copy that? (I thi...
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7,883
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[ 7985 ]
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7,890
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comment
Tichy
1,175,373,993
OK, not the right place for that discussion. The reason languages like python are inherently slower is that they are not strongly typed. It seems only LISP is getting it right, I think there you can voluntarily use strong typing, allowing for dramatic speed improvements - why don't any other languages copy that? (I thi...
true
7,883
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7,892
null
comment
python_kiss
1,175,374,253
Interestingly, Larry Page was reluctant to publish this infamous research paper when it was first conceived. Much of Larry's thinking was inspired by Nikola Tesla's life; a genius whose inventions were often mocked upon and stolen by Thomas Edison. It was Larry's research advisor who convinced him to publish the paper....
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inklesspen
1,175,374,028
I guess this depends on what you mean by "most advanced". TeXmacs combines the easy learning curve of Emacs with the familiar word processing paradigm of TeX to form a program usable by 1/10000 of the market. Sure, it's advanced. So's the flight deck of the Airbus A380.<p>A more successful interpretation of "most advan...
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story
mattculbreth
1,175,373,430
null
null
null
null
[ 7895 ]
http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/03/call_for_a_blog_1.html
3
Tim O'Reilly with a call for a Blogger's Code of Conduct
null
1
7,823
null
comment
dpapathanasiou
1,175,356,509
A while ago, I remember reading on Emanuel Derman's blog (<a href="http://www.wilmott.com/blogs/eman/)">http://www.wilmott.com/blogs/eman/)</a> a comment along the lines of "Time and the right to choose have value".<p>So while I'm sure you can find some job to pay the bills, consider how much time (and in what state me...
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7,855
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story
stevendavis0830
1,175,367,065
null
true
null
null
[ 7881 ]
http://www.ebizmba.com/articles/making+money+online.html
2
Top 10 Reasons You Are Not Making Money Online
null
1
7,883
null
comment
inklesspen
1,175,373,028
My perception is that the extra coding done to implement things like patterns to get around the fact that Java is so limited a language will cut down on the performance gains. But I don't have any statistics to back that up.<p>BTW, Python is not just a scripting language. It is a real language that just happens to be u...
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[ 7889, 7890 ]
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pg
1,175,373,512
We tell people finally on the 22nd, not the 29th. Which is still after the 16th, but only 6 days after.
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pg
1,175,359,749
I'm sure techstars would take anyone who made it to the interview stage at YC, regardless of deadlines.
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[ 7882, 7984 ]
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Elfan
1,175,368,240
This is their first batch.
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domp
1,175,376,939
This article gives a great view of how the record labels were reacting to this innovative approach to music. It also has some helpful tips on starting a startup.
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vlad
1,175,378,794
Mark Zuckerberg is not arrogant. People who are convinced that Mark is anybody but a busy person who has way more responsibility to society on his free breakfast, lunch, and dinner plate[1] than any other 22-year-old on the planet, are misleading themselves and their friends.<p>It is very easy to point a finger at Mar...
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[ 7971 ]
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pg
1,175,374,509
yes
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[ 7918 ]
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domp
1,175,376,014
null
null
null
null
[ 7901 ]
http://dondodge.typepad.com/the_next_big_thing/2007/03/how_napster_cha.html
3
How Napster changed the world - A look back 7 years later from the VP of Product Development
null
1
7,897
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story
Bronen
1,175,375,346
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null
null
http://pulse2.com/2007/03/05/the-new-ui-of-quintura-and-upcoming-services/
1
In order for any product be successful, the founder must really passionate about the idea and responsive to constructive criticism.
null
0
7,895
null
comment
nickb
1,175,374,767
What about addressing the "pay per blog entry" unethical businesses that are springing up?
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comment
amichail
1,175,375,104
For a clever variation on PageRank using vision-based page segmentation, see:<p><a href="http://research.microsoft.com/research/pubs/view.aspx?tr_id=754">http://research.microsoft.com/research/pubs/view.aspx?tr_id=754</a><p>For a more sophisticated web page similarity measure inspired by PageRank, see:<p><a href="http:...
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7,902
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story
jcwentz
1,175,377,947
null
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null
http://www.trnicely.net/misc/vista.html
5
Windows Vista restricts GNU GCC apps to 32 MB
null
0
7,903
null
story
domp
1,175,378,291
null
null
null
null
[ 8034, 8126, 7931, 8102 ]
http://www.centernetworks.com/video-review-of-tapefailure-watch-your-users-use-your-site
15
TapeFailure - Watch your users use your site
null
7
7,898
null
comment
amichail
1,175,375,518
"Link spam is used to increase the ranking of certain target web pages by misleading the connectivity-based ranking algorithms in search engines. In this paper we study how web pages can be interconnected in a spam farm in order to optimize rankings. We also study alliances, that is, interconnections of spam farms. Our...
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comment
phil
1,175,374,488
seems to be down, though the server is pinging.
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7,900
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story
pg
1,175,376,915
null
null
null
null
[ 7932, 7981 ]
http://lucidmedia.cirne.com/index.php/2007/04/01/justintv-p0wns-eisner/
3
Justin.TV pwns king content
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4
7,906
null
comment
budu3
1,175,379,390
Wow, amazing design philosophy. It's so unlike a google philossphy giving that he works with google. If this was done by google they'd keep every email ever sent to mailinator and analyse it for stats and patterns the help improve the system.
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Tichy
1,175,379,140
However, I noticed that YC did not ask for my email address, so it was not a painful way of registering. Also, you can read the news without an account.
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chendy
1,175,379,781
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http://www.fuzzyfuture.com/general/10-lessons-frank-millers-300-can-teach-you-about-successful-online-business/
3
10 Lessons Frank Miller's 300 can teach you about Successful Online Business
null
0
7,908
null
comment
Tichy
1,175,379,860
In the end though, is it not all about money? As far as I am concerned, grad school is something you do for fun, and which costs a lot of money. Even if you receive a minimum paycheck, you have to take the opportunity costs into consideratiosn, so five years of grad school cost several 100000$, or am I mistaken? Why th...
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[ 9181 ]
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story
python_kiss
1,175,381,929
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http://blog.reddit.com/2007/03/brace-yourself-ads-are-coming.html
4
Reddit To Start Showing Ads
null
0
7,911
null
comment
zaidf
1,175,382,055
A big part of YComb is subtly teaching people to live an entrepreneurial life way beyond the three months you spend at YComb. That is why YComb doesn't seem to care THAT much about one particular idea. Instead they bank on the people they fund to continue making new stuff and really, if you make enough new things, you ...
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[ 8234 ]
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joshwa
1,175,382,368
if you're going to create sockpuppet accounts, at least have the creativity to name them differently!
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msgbeepa
1,175,382,778
null
true
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null
null
http://www.avinio.blogspot.com/2007/03/special-best-100-april-fools-day-jokes.html
1
Special - The Best 100 April Fool's Day Jokes Of All Time
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-1
7,909
null
comment
Tichy
1,175,379,958
I expect that once you start dedicating yourself to one thing, you will quickly meet the right people.
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zach
1,175,387,119
Raph Koster's stuff is boring as hell for me and I get nothing insightful or novel out of it. Having read his endless article series in Game Developer, it came as no surprise he would publish a title like "A Theory of Fun." Probably a decent guy, but I wouldn't hire him.
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herdrick
1,175,388,478
"While plenty of startups are launching, we aren’t seeing any actual innovation any more... there just isn’t anything left to invent."<p>Definitely April Fools.
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domp
1,175,386,345
Read/WriteWeb wrote an article about this April Fools joke. Check it out:<p><a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/the_end_of_an_era_1april07.php">http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/the_end_of_an_era_1april07.php</a>
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danw
1,175,384,156
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[ 7919, 7923, 7968, 7924 ]
http://www.scribd.com/slurp?url=http://www.theoryoffun.com/theoryoffun.pdf
7
Theory of Fun
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vlad
1,175,383,017
You have a higher chance of becoming rich with YCombinator than writing a factually accurate research paper.<p>Paul Graham: "So about 50% of the founders from that first summer, less than two years ago, are now rich, at least by their standards. "<p>New Scientist Magazine: Most scientific research papers are wrong ( <...
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joshwa
1,175,383,550
the links to Ralph Koster's presentations towards the bottom are especially worthwhile...
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gibsonf1
1,175,385,613
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http://www.leansoftwareinstitute.com/art_ilsd.php
1
Introducing Lean Software Development
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domp
1,175,390,686
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[ 7925, 7979, 7928 ]
http://gigaom.com/2007/03/31/xcerion/
5
Xcerion: A YouOS Competitor startup
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zaidf
1,175,401,365
This is two for two for me after TechCrunch.<p>April Fools and 20hr day don't go together. Next one to post a similar thing gets a smacking from me;)
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mattculbreth
1,175,393,648
XML-based? Hmm.
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domp
1,175,397,145
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[ 7938, 8033 ]
http://redcouch.typepad.com/weblog/2007/03/jajah_buys_vona.html
2
Jajah buys Vonage
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Tron
1,175,395,977
I wouldn't have the balls to put "failure" in the name of my startup.
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[ 7939, 7941 ]
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raganwald
1,175,402,122
What can I say, except "carry on, it's your money!"<p>But whether you would pay more or not, the subject was contemplating employment with a company and valuing stock options.<p>Never mind generalities. If Sequoia have a wonderful track record for picking winners, I offered another means of calculating the value of the...
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JMiao
1,175,390,742
Btw, danw, did you get this from reading my iminlikewithyou profile? :-)
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danielha
1,175,399,499
People seem to keep ignoring that April Fools is actually in April, not the last day of March. (Then again, it could be 4/1 over there.)
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vlad
1,175,404,600
That's a very great perspective. I want to be the Ben Folds of my niche.
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awt
1,175,401,714
I guess you've never had a failed startup.
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zaidf
1,175,399,818
Yeah rather awkward word choice.
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juwo
1,175,395,905
Reminds me of Nicola Tesla's holy grail. He conducted lots of weird experiments in the later part of his life to transmit power across the aether.
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RyanGWU82
1,175,396,589
Wow, a huge above-the-fold piece on the Chronicle front page, in their second week of operations, that's <i>amazing</i> placement.<p>Does anyone know if Justin has professional PR assistance, or if they're generating all the media buzz themselves?
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domp
1,175,393,703
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http://mashable.com/2007/03/31/workspace/
2
Workspace: Web-based access to FTP
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mattculbreth
1,175,397,341
This seems like the coolest thing since sliced bread. We're experimenting with S3 but I'm really interested in EC2 also. Anybody else using AWS?
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omarish
1,175,403,440
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[ 7963, 7947 ]
http://yeahsystems.com/blog/?p=6
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Being the Ben Folds of your Niche
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mattculbreth
1,175,397,257
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[ 8492, 7945, 9257, 7951, 7987, 8369, 7949, 7962, 7936, 7996 ]
http://www.amazon.com/Why-Use-AWS%3F-home-page/b/ref=sc_fe_l_1/103-1678423-5846208?ie=UTF8&node=15763371&no=3435361&me=A36L942TSJ2AJA
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Anybody using Amazon Web Services (S3, EC2) in their startup?
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binarybana
1,175,405,915
I know that YouOS uses it.
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pg
1,175,392,328
That name will not help them.
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