Anyone have experience with a host, good or bad, that they'd like to share? We've got a couple hosts in mind, but if anyone is going to have good tips on this, it's Hacker News.
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cached about 1 month ago
We're in the early stages of our app and just recently decided to write it in Lisp (we started out with Ruby, but given what we're doing, Lisp began to look like a very good fit).
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The Facebook Commandments
(slate.com)
cached 6 days ago
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cached about 1 month ago
As we were clicking "submit" the other day, I was thinking about what separates the teams that get accepted from the teams that don't. There are a bunch of criteria we're judged on, but perhaps the most important (and the source of the irony I'm talking about) is that for a team to be accepted, it can't need YC.
That doesn't mean, of course, that being YC alums isn't wonderful and helpful and all the rest. What it does mean is that the people who get in are exactly the kind of people who would respond best to not getting in--namely by keeping busy on the company as if nothing had happened. It's a frequent theme in PG's essays that YC takes people for whom building cool things is a bodily function, not something they need external incentives or security to do. This same irony applies to nearly every competitive application process (e.g. PG's other advice that companies obsessed with getting bought are the very ones that don't get bought). I feel that keeping that in mind is a very useful approach to these things. And good luck! |
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Deciding About Indecision
(mit.edu)
cached 12 months ago
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Problems with Leopard's UI
(thinkmac.co.uk)
cached 12 months ago
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cached about 1 month ago
We did it in 2 ;).
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MIT Entrance Exam from 1869-1870
(mit.edu)
cached about 1 month ago
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Instructables -- step-by-step instructions for everything
(instructables.com)
cached about 1 month ago
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The Unsung Heroes Who Move Products Forward
(nytimes.com)
cached 12 months ago
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Amazon Launches DRM-free Music Store
(arstechnica.com)
cached about 1 month ago
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