printerjam
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14 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Please review our self-service sharing platform (with HN promo code)
Thank you. I must say, you summarized our core product very well.
printerjam
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14 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Please review our self-service sharing platform (with HN promo code)
Thanks for the feedback. It sounds like we've got some work to do in the 'clarification' department.
printerjam
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14 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Can I learn to be a programmer/developer without going to university?
Agreed. You gotta just start programming things that matter to you. I know many good programmers who have non-CS degrees but have been hackers since they were kids. Through trial and error, and a lot of reading on the side, they've turned out to be phenomenal programmers. And each job they've held along the way, they've learned a ton from other people on their teams.
printerjam
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14 years ago
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on: How Face(.com) Recognition Could Fit Into Facebook Mobile
I agree, if only because Facebook is primarily a giant photo album.
printerjam
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14 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Looking for an easy and cheap-ish way to create t-shirts for my startup
I haven't ordered any t-shirts yet, but I've been digging this company's user interface to get the design set. Prices seem reasonable. What's really cool is the selection of t-shirt brands. Meaning, you can get a nice, soft American Apparel shirt. Vistaprint did not offer as many choices (styles, brands or colors). Zazzle seem too expensive.
http://www.customink.com
printerjam
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14 years ago
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on: Why don't rich people do more awesome things?
I'm not going to defend PG, specifically, but you've got to realize that being a building owner/manager is a specific skill set. It takes a lot of time, too. Why would anyone who isn't passionate about commercial real estate put his money into it? It's kinda the principle of sticking to what one knows and is passionate about running/operating/building. In some way, Paul IS doing something awesome by putting his money where his mouth is AND mentoring entrepreneurs.
printerjam
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15 years ago
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on: Is Microsoft poised for turnaround?
Turnaround? Their revenue in 2000 was 23 billion and in 2010 it was 62 billion. They doubled their earnings over the decade. The commonly penned idea in the press that MSFT sucks and Ballmer needs to be ousted is horse crap.
printerjam
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15 years ago
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on: IBM Gets the Errol Morris Treatment
Great mini-doc and great subject matter. Thanks for posting.
printerjam
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15 years ago
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on: Poll: How many Groupons have you purchased?
1
printerjam
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15 years ago
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on: Advertise on Google? Use +1 Now.
Seems that there are two reasons to do this. For search, isn't this just a Blekko-inspired (read: crowdsourced) way to improve Google's search results? And for advertisers, isn't this creating a knock-on, viral effect? Seems like the +1 approach is a pretty good idea.
printerjam
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15 years ago
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on: Soundcloud launches customization feature. rips off geocities
Hilarious! Blast from the past for sure.
printerjam
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15 years ago
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on: Bottom just fell out of Nikkei
This is a tough bet. My first reaction was, "They are going to open up their wallets and spend like crazy to rebuild." Then I heard on the news that Japan runs a massive fiscal deficit and I thought, "Where are they going to get the money." When the market cools, it might be good to pick individual stocks (construction and pharma come to mind). Right now though, staying out of the broader market (index funds, etc.) might be prudent.
printerjam
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15 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Are there other services similar to LaunchRock?
I'm using Unbounce now. But they don't have a social/viral component.
printerjam
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15 years ago
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on: Student Who Found GPS Device On His Car Due To Reddit Comment Sues The FBI
Open information systems (the internet) leads to all sorts of changes in closed system (Middle Eastern governments, State Departments, the FBI). The internet is fun again.
printerjam
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15 years ago
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on: The Top Five Reasons Entrepreneurs Should Learn About IP Law
The new entrepreneurs you deal with, have they worked in other startups before or are they really young?
The first thing I did with my company was hire a lawyer. This is the first company I've personally started, but not my first startup. So my question above has to do with the experience level of the folks to whom you are preaching. To me, getting incorporated correctly, trademark searches, etc. was extremely important and well worth the money I paid.
printerjam
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15 years ago
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on: Review my Startup: Radius - location based message broadcasting
The UI/UX is really nice. Give yourself some credit on that part.
One thing to keep in mind: CB worked because it was a communication tool for a very specific community (truckers). You may want to start out with a user niche to get initial traction.
printerjam
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15 years ago
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on: Self-serve banner ad design tool Canned Banners exits beta
You've made a pretty nice banner creator. Might be worth looking at partnerships with publishers who have self service ad buying platforms or platforms like PageGage.
printerjam
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15 years ago
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on: Ask HN: Name my e-commerce startup
I named my company on the first day that I sat down to write an outline of the business plan. Having written my thoughts about what the business would be in Microsoft Word, I had to save the file to my desktop and name it. I gave no thought of the business name, I just named the doc with the first thing that came to me - a working title that I intended to change later. But the name never changed because it was unique and top of mind. It stuck.
Try tapping into a stream of consciousness (meaning, don't over think things) and write a list of words. Or, ask some relative who is not tech savvy to tell you the first words that come to their mind (my mom is good for this).
Lastly, in my second startup (circa 1999), we hired a naming consultant for big $$ and the one take away was: Brand names pretty much don't matter. Nike may have sounded dumb the first time people heard it, but folks remembered it AFTER they tried their shoes. Intel sounds like a spy organization. Microsoft sounds like something for scientists, yet it is a consumer brand now. The bottom line: Don't freak out to much on the name.