benreyes | 5 years ago | on: My 15 Years Striving for Search Engine Independence. AMA
benreyes's comments
benreyes | 13 years ago | on: Show HN: GoScale Cloud Scaling in Milliseconds
I did on purposely have the 'pages' resize directly to the user's viewport using javascript as a visual style of design.
benreyes | 13 years ago | on: Show HN: GoScale Cloud Scaling in Milliseconds
benreyes | 13 years ago | on: Show HN: GoScale Cloud Scaling in Milliseconds
Unfortunately I made a change to video providers (to VidYard for analytics) which broke the video resize script (FitVids-JS). Whoops, my mistake.
benreyes | 13 years ago | on: A Statistical Portrait of a Y Combinator Batch
benreyes | 14 years ago | on: What's Not wrong with the London startup scene...
One to check out. I would like to see a similar programme for London.
benreyes | 14 years ago | on: Steve Jobs biography -- Isaacson blew it
benreyes | 14 years ago | on: TechZing (Tech Startup Podcast) Celebrates Its 150th Episode
It's not really for people who like short podcasts, but this is what makes it great. You get depth where other podcasts won't go or that just glosses over talking points.
benreyes | 14 years ago | on: Ask PG: Bad apples that got into YC?
benreyes | 14 years ago | on: How to find a cofounder as a teen
In terms of finding a co-founder, why not partnering up with another teen? Events like Young Rewired State (UK - http://rewiredstate.org/events/young-2010), hack days and barcamps all usually have teens attending them.
Check out TeensInTech (Bay Area - http://teensintech.com/) which also runs a teen tech incubator.
There are also a few online young entrepreneurial groups such as Millennium Generation https://www.facebook.com/groups/rockstars and theres WebeTalk IRC chat (http://webetalk.com) which is frequented by some of the youngest YC startup founders.
If you want to take a different more active approach try building something small and useful that will get you tons of press and coverage on HackerNews. You can also tip TechCrunch ([email protected]), building something that people are aware of outside of you telling them will definitely help you find and secure a co-founder. On top of that the media and others absolutely love young entrepreneurs stories. So with a bit of work you will be able to get coverage.
If you want to team up with a more experienced person, why don't you ask them to be your mentor, ask their advice (it's generally good to have personal advisors, they'll help you out). Build that relationship and if things look good, maybe you could ask them to join as a co-founder or help out. Many startups do this to acquire higher level executives or even investors.
If you have a technical background, you don't need a co-founder to start. I hope this helps and good-luck, many of us have been there before.
benreyes | 14 years ago | on: How teenagers handle the web's instant fame
She gained my respect, it's basic marketing 101 but even grown adults trying to market a company often don't have this type of intuition to capture marketing/relationship leads whilst the buzz is still hot.
benreyes | 15 years ago | on: Pusher Raises $1M From Heroku Founders And More To Bring Realtime Tech To Apps
So the founders full focus is on the Pusher product. Most, if not nearly all investors tend to want you to put in professional management in a service business and spin off the product to a separate company before investing large amounts of seed capital.
benreyes | 15 years ago | on: automated office hours with pg
benreyes | 15 years ago | on: Ask HN: What personal projects/goals are people working on for this summer?
Then will spend some time to work out the algorithms to do the automatic curation of the services & tools. Hence my interest into exploring probably & statistics modelling / machine learning further.
I'll send you an email.
benreyes | 15 years ago | on: Ask HN: What personal projects/goals are people working on for this summer?
----
As for what I'm working on in the summer. If everything goes to plan.
- A directory of startup tools
- Brush up on my probability and statistics with the help of the Khan Academy and some text books.
- Then explore machine learning. Hope to go through the Stanford Machine learning video lectures. Then apply some of the modelling to the project above.
As for goals, I'd like to be ramen profitable with the tool/service directory.
benreyes | 15 years ago | on: Do not let your domain expire with Google Apps
It's also a cautionary tale of what you leave up on the cloud when you abandon your email account. I could have potentially found a lot more damaging information from gaining access to this persons email.
benreyes | 15 years ago | on: Do not let your domain expire with Google Apps
There does not seem to be any alarming distress in the situation. It has been over 2 months since the incident, I made sure that the person(s) involved was fully aware and of the blog post. No issue was raised about me writing it up and posting it. I also waited for a period of time to hear back from the Google Security Team. I believe I have taken the correct response here.
benreyes | 15 years ago | on: Responding to Criticism
If you are getting criticism from a coach, teacher, mentor or customers it's a good thing because if they aren't giving criticism then they've already given up on you.
Having been to a theatre/performing school for a bit as a kid. They would tell like a 10 year old that they sucked and how they could improve. The kid starts breaking down with visible tears, it's then explained that it's professional criticism. You end up building that skin, and you continue to keep progressing.
But there's a flip side to it. Criticism is often affected by a filter or lens that the other person sees through, by their past experiences, pattern recognition and world view. So you have to take that into consideration. You can be driven off path by taking everyones criticism. Here is a good quote from Jeff Bazos:
"Think Long Term - On feedback and being misunderstood: If we think we are right, then we continue. If we are criticized for something we think we’re wrong on, we change it, we fix it. It’s really important to think about this things, but never to buckle to standard kind of pressure that forces really short term kind of thinking. It’s a competitive advantage to think long term."
- Jeff Bazos
There is not a single way or method to climb a mountain. But you'd be crazy if you didn't take the advise and criticism of others that have gone there in the past or have a deep understanding of the area.
But my personal view is that criticism should never be taken negatively.
benreyes | 15 years ago | on: Muting annoying users on Twitter without unfollowing them
There is also another chrome plugin called Proxlet http://proxlet.com which does something similar. Seems like there are many tools out there but discovery and marketing is all ways an issue.
benreyes | 15 years ago | on: Seedcamp London 2011 Winners announced
I have a question about SeedCamp around the signalling effect by participating.
So with SeedCamp's model that a round of startup get to go through their program but only a few get funded. What happens to the startups that don't get funded, are they negatively signaled? Almost like how if your current investors don't follow on the next round and they have the money, then it signals to the market that something is very wrong.