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If You Can Make It in Silicon Valley, You Can Make It . . . in Silicon Valley Again by noteworthy at 1:08 pm EDT, Jun 5, 2005 |
Marc Andreessen continues to fill up notebooks with ideas and sketched-out business plans for new companies. Among the gossipy cognoscenti, it's a poorly kept secret that in recent months he has been occupied starting a new Internet company. Improbable as it may seem, given the breadth and depth of the dot-com collapse, not to mention the emergence of hivelike high-tech centers in places like China and India now available for off-shoring and outsourcing, Silicon Valley is starting to feel like 1995 -- the year Netscape went public -- all over again. The miracle of Silicon Valley is that it is a system finely calibrated to spit out new companies -- some of which have come to be worth hundreds of millions, if not billions, within a few years' time. "I think the mistake now is holding back when you've got a good idea." Particularly with the rich scent of investment money once again in the air. They form the core of a revived entrepreneurial network drunk on the idea of creating the next big thing. None have to work another day in their lives, yet they still routinely work 60 to 70 hours a week -- except those who sheepishly confess to working 80. "You can't underestimate the good feeling you get when people in your wider social circle think you created something really, really cool." "It's like the word 'opportunity' is there in front of you in red flashing lights and you feel you have no choice. I'm having the time of my life." "I know one venture capitalist who's basically reviewing scores of ideas from 1999 [2], figuring there's all these babies thrown out with the bath water. I think he's right." "We are not ready to stop changing the world."
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RE: If You Can Make It in Silicon Valley, You Can Make It . . . in Silicon Valley Again by flynn23 at 11:40 pm EDT, Jun 5, 2005 |
noteworthy wrote: Marc Andreessen continues to fill up notebooks with ideas and sketched-out business plans for new companies. Among the gossipy cognoscenti, it's a poorly kept secret that in recent months he has been occupied starting a new Internet company. Improbable as it may seem, given the breadth and depth of the dot-com collapse, not to mention the emergence of hivelike high-tech centers in places like China and India now available for off-shoring and outsourcing, Silicon Valley is starting to feel like 1995 -- the year Netscape went public -- all over again. The miracle of Silicon Valley is that it is a system finely calibrated to spit out new companies -- some of which have come to be worth hundreds of millions, if not billions, within a few years' time. "I think the mistake now is holding back when you've got a good idea." Particularly with the rich scent of investment money once again in the air. They form the core of a revived entrepreneurial network drunk on the idea of creating the next big thing. None have to work another day in their lives, yet they still routinely work 60 to 70 hours a week -- except those who sheepishly confess to working 80. "You can't underestimate the good feeling you get when people in your wider social circle think you created something really, really cool." "It's like the word 'opportunity' is there in front of you in red flashing lights and you feel you have no choice. I'm having the time of my life." "I know one venture capitalist who's basically reviewing scores of ideas from 1999 [2], figuring there's all these babies thrown out with the bath water. I think he's right." "We are not ready to stop changing the world."
Fuck you Marc. Where were you in 02 when everyone and their brother was bashing the shit out of the dot.com world? When people were actually taking their URL's off of ads so that they could distance themselves from the stench. You were hiding, counting your money, and your blessings about how lucky you were to get out before the cards came down. You certainly weren't out there on CNN talking about "we're not ready to stop changing the world" or helping to defend all those saps that lost their shirts in the bust. At least Cuban had the balls to still talk the talk when everyone else was walking out. In the end, you're not changing the world at all. All you've learned is what Clark taught you - how to fleece The System when the going gets good. That's hardly revolutionary or novel. |
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RE: If You Can Make It in Silicon Valley, You Can Make It . . . in Silicon Valley Again by noteworthy at 12:03 am EDT, Jun 6, 2005 |
flynn23 wrote: Fuck you Marc. In the end, you're not changing the world at all. All you've learned is what Clark taught you - how to fleece The System when the going gets good. That's hardly revolutionary or novel.
Feeling a bit bitter, are we, maybe? Need I invoke Powell's Rules again? I suggest a heady cocktail of 2, 3, 7, 10, and 13; and call me in the morning. |
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RE: If You Can Make It in Silicon Valley, You Can Make It . . . in Silicon Valley Again by flynn23 at 12:43 am EDT, Jun 6, 2005 |
noteworthy wrote: flynn23 wrote: Fuck you Marc. In the end, you're not changing the world at all. All you've learned is what Clark taught you - how to fleece The System when the going gets good. That's hardly revolutionary or novel.
Feeling a bit bitter, are we, maybe? Need I invoke Powell's Rules again? I suggest a heady cocktail of 2, 3, 7, 10, and 13; and call me in the morning.
heh... a good suggestion nonetheless! I'm not bitter. I made plenty of money during the boom years. I'm pissed because I didn't get to finish changing the world the way I thought I was going to. But I've found another way to do it, and I'll be damned if I get stopped again. The real point I was trying to make is that I didn't go hiding like a rat. I was out there proclaiming that we've not even begun to realize the values that were being postulated during the boom. Yes, the Internet *does* change everything. We just haven't even seen how much that really means. |
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If You Can Make It in Silicon Valley, You Can Make It . . . in Silicon Valley Again by Rattle at 4:42 pm EDT, Jun 5, 2005 |
Marc Andreessen continues to fill up notebooks with ideas and sketched-out business plans for new companies. Among the gossipy cognoscenti, it's a poorly kept secret that in recent months he has been occupied starting a new Internet company. Improbable as it may seem, given the breadth and depth of the dot-com collapse, not to mention the emergence of hivelike high-tech centers in places like China and India now available for off-shoring and outsourcing, Silicon Valley is starting to feel like 1995 -- the year Netscape went public -- all over again. The miracle of Silicon Valley is that it is a system finely calibrated to spit out new companies -- some of which have come to be worth hundreds of millions, if not billions, within a few years' time. "I think the mistake now is holding back when you've got a good idea." Particularly with the rich scent of investment money once again in the air. They form the core of a revived entrepreneurial network drunk on the idea of creating the next big thing. None have to work another day in their lives, yet they still routinely work 60 to 70 hours a week -- except those who sheepishly confess to working 80. "You can't underestimate the good feeling you get when people in your wider social circle think you created something really, really cool." "It's like the word 'opportunity' is there in front of you in red flashing lights and you feel you have no choice. I'm having the time of my life." "I know one venture capitalist who's basically reviewing scores of ideas from 1999 [2], figuring there's all these babies thrown out with the bath water. I think he's right." "We are not ready to stop changing the world."
Wanted: "Silicon Valley ate my balls" webpage. If I had my choice of locations to base Industrial Memetics and the MemeStreams empire out of, I'd probably pick New York for the Business and Media HQ, and San Francisco for Engineering and Research & Development. All the code tinkering and thinking would run out of the Bay Area in an effort to pool and poll its talent pool. All the (non-vendor) business relationships and production of PodCasts and vCasts would be run out of Manhattan, most likely mid-town, although that Freedom Tower is going to be pretty alluring whenever they actually build the damn thing. We could nickname the company intranet "The I-80". Someone get me about $40-60 million, please. I'll start doing the diamond thing with my hands, and I'll take meetings and make decisions all day. I might even cut my hair, although I wouldn't expect Decius to cut his. Everyone could start calling me a self-righteous-militant-asshole behind my back, and maybe we'd be able to get something done this time around, without Silicon Valley eating our balls. |
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