jetpack | 18 years ago | on: $200 Linux PC at Walmart sells out
jetpack's comments
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: The Nerd Handbook
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: Ask YC: How will the US economy affect the probability of startup success
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: 29 Years Old, Start a Business or Have a Baby?
On the other hand some men would not consider that to be a problem at all (assuming you can find a mate). And if you're a 40 yearold millionaire you shouldn't have a problem finding a 20-something to have a kid with. :-)
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: Absolutely, DO NOT, get a co-founder!
I can give a whole bunch of examples. Apple: Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak. Microsoft: Bill Gates and Paul Allen. Valve: Gabe Newell and Mike Harrington. Id Software: John Carmack and John Romero. People split for various reasons, sometimes due to disagreements. Sometimes personal reasons or change of interests. In the end most companies seem to end up being run by one person whether or not they were founded by more than one.
There are also successful companies that were founded by one person, like Dell and Amazon. So to me it seems that statistically speaking eventually you'll split up and one of you will have to leave the company.
Ultimately it seems that the co-founder issue is mostly an issue of initial mutual support. It's tough to go through the early stages on your own, and having someone to share the workload with and get moral support from increases your chances of success. But it can only truly work in the long term if you decide at the beginning that one of you will be the president and have the final word in major decisions. Otherwise it's a recipe for trouble down the road.
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: Ask YC news: are you supposed to get a karma point for submitting a link?
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: Hey, Look Who's Now The 5th Biggest Company in the US
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: PaperBack: Back up your code to paper (seriously)
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: Microsoft hard at work getting Windows to run on OLPC computers
Sounds like a great opportunity for desktop Linux. Let's hope they stick with it.
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: The Microsoft Machine Keeps Chugging Along
Huh? Powerful franchise? People buying new computers without any choice of not getting Windows shows that Vista is very popular? The only reason people are using Vista at all is because it ships with new computers.
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: Quit Business school.
Don't get me wrong -- Woz was certainly an engineering genius, but he didn't have any of the vision that Jobs had for building something great. To Woz it was just something interesting to do. Jobs saw the potential of what Woz was able to create. Those two as a pair were the perfect storm that ushered in a personal computing revolution.
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: The end of Microsoft as we know it?
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: Strange Bedfellows: Why an Apple/Google collaboration has been so difficult to make happen.
And by the way, you CAN upgrade the RAM and even the hard drive in a MacBook without voiding your warranty. I upgraded both in mine. They can be accessed by taking out the battery.
jetpack | 18 years ago | on: Ubuntu 7.10 Released
I generally strive to embrace new things and new ways of doing things. As long as I believe they're practical. For instance, full OS upgrade over the internet -- brilliant. Ubuntu is the first to offer this to my knowledge. On the other hand, web apps.. I don't see that as being very practical any time soon.
There will certainly be bugs and there's a certain amount of risk in doing an internet upgrade, but this is not major risk. Yet embracing the way of the future early will get you a head start, and I think it's an important mindset to have.
The market will take care of itself. Windows is severely overpriced, and at least the low end PC market will most likely be taken over by Linux in the near future. An average OEM Windows license costs $40 I believe. That $40 (or less) may be the entire profit margin in a $200 PC. Microsoft's free ride on OEMs is finally coming to an end.
For the record I use all of the Big Three: Windows, Linux (Ubuntu), and Mac. My personal opinion is that Mac OS X beats the other two hands down as a consumer desktop OS.