how radical

are you prepared to be? 

Databases from the Edge (of sanity)

Jason and I are giving a talk tonight at our alma mater this evening and were reminiscing about some of our entrepreneurial highs and lows. The Kaleidoscope Database was a legend in the first Slicehost office and fueled waayyyy too many geeky one-liners. The ad below was torn from a Visual C magazine and hung over my desk for some time. My favorite part? IT WILL NOT COME CHEAP!

A brand new concept of Data Base technology, which operates on a principle called "Harmonics", utilizes only 800 bits of storage and is accessed by what we call "Sweepers".


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Mom's famous Jello salad

It's really beautiful, takes all day to make.

   
Click here to download:
Moms_famous_Jello_salad.zip (341 KB)

The red stuff in the blue glass? Pop Rocks!!

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Wake up running CNBC

"Every morning in Africa, a gazelle wakes up. It knows it must run faster than the fastest lion or it will be killed. Every morning a lion wakes up. It knows it must outrun the slowest gazelle or it will starve to death. It doesn't matter whether you are a lion or a gazelle: when the sun comes up, you'd better be running."

No this isn't going to be a lame inspirational post. I just watched a CNBC clip that pissed me off. It was a 2-minute blurb on Stocktwits. As per CNBC standards, it was crappy. If you haven't heard of Stocktwits, it's a simple idea. Prefix stocks you tweet about with a dollar sign ($). At the Stocktwits site, those dollar signs are aggregated and you can see what people are saying about a stock or track trades in real time.

They pushed my button with a minute left: "Experts warn, none of these sites can replace professional advice."

Really? No seriously, WTF CNBC? The same experts that built and sold a ticking time bomb? Maybe they're the experts that safely navigated your 401k through the minefield otherwise known as "the last 6 months". Or the experts running hedge funds? What about the banks, they're experts right? Are they the experts you have on that cheer the bullish days and call bottoms on the down days?

Well that's cute, but listen to the experts.

The Internet has been rocking worlds for 10 plus years. Are there still people smirking at tiny ideas gaining momentum? Do they think they're immune? CNBC should be scared shitless that an information junkie like me has learned more in the last 5 months on Stocktwits than years of backgrounding their shows. The financial experts should be worried about the sharp, creative people I see tweeting and posting their way to profits . The WSJ should wonder why I'll skip a day or two of skimming their paper, but I don't leave the house before I read tweets and feeds.

It's 2009, we're not in Africa, there aren't any gazelles or lions. You better wake up running, because the Internet is going to punch your mustache off.








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Slicehosting Ballers

I'm in a fantasy baseball league with Om Malik and some other tech types. He posted his lineup today and I took my first serious look at my roster. Sheesh this could be a long year. 


I've never played in a league this big (16 teams). It will be fun to try and pick a few surprises and out maneuver a bunch of baseball ubergeeks.

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Can the market be fixed?


"Time and simple corrective measures would have cleaned up the stock market. Instead, Obama and company think they can fix the economy and stock market at the same time with drastic measures. It is not working and will not work."

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Robert Scoble and Lew Moorman

Sent from my iPhone

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Startup Lessons from The Snowball

I resisted Warren Buffet for a long time, namely because 2 friends worshiped the ground he walked on. 

"He was an anomaly, lucky, blah blah blah..." I'd say dismissively as they quoted Buffet business nuggets.

But the story was too sexy for me to ignore. There was so much money, made out in the middle of nowhere and the consistency. My God the consistency. Temptation won, I read tidbits here and there, skimmed a partnership letter on occasion. I'm not sure when it happened, but I caved and turned into a Warren Buffet fanboy.

I had a few books about him on my radar, but never picked one up. At Borders one afternoon, I came across a new, thousand page monster on Warren called "The Snowball" by Alice Schroeder. I made a note to check it out online - it was getting great reviews, but I balked. Then I found myself at the airport a few weeks ago with a brand new Kindle 2, a 4-hour flight and nothing to read. Geek cliche no? So I grepped for something on my wishlist in the Kindle store and found The Snowball.

A third of the way through, I can't recommend this book enough. Ms. Schroeder tells a story so well that I have to pull myself away from it. That means a lot coming from me because I rarely have the interest or patience to slog through a biography. 

Enough plugging and back to the title. I found myself clipping little bits from the book and was amazed at how familiar it sounds. 

Here's a quote about Charlier Munger, who ultimately becomes Warren's partner:

"Charlie, as a very young lawyer, was probably getting $20 an hour. He thought to himself, 'Who's my most valuable client?' And he decided it was himself. So he decided to sell himself an hour each day. He did it in the morning, working on these construction projects and real estate deals. Everybody should do this, be the client, and then work for other people, too, and sell yourself an hour a day."

Getting Real anyone?

How about this one:

"Even Buffet realized by now that his growing collection of files, phone bills, and stock trades had reached the limits of what he could handle working in a home office. He disliked taking on overhead, but he could afford it."

That's Warren Buffet, at age 30, already a millionaire, long past ramen profitable still handling the grunt work himself and fighting to stay lean. Given that it's easier and cheaper than ever to start and run a company, how can this not fire you up?

And my favorite quote so far:

"Intensity is the price of excellence."

Warren was a machine. As a young boy, he worked hard and smart. But once he started investing with frequency, he took it to another level. The man was constantly reading/studying/analyzing/prowling to get an edge. His personal life suffered, but it was a price he was willing to pay.  We're bombarded with overnight success stories and most of the time they're bullshit. It take passion, dedication and sacrifice to reach lofty heights. Get used to it, because things don't get easier.

Enough for tonight. If you're running a business or day-dreaming about one, GO GET THIS BOOK. I'm sure it'll goose me for another post or 2 in the future.

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A little piece of SF heaven

     
Click here to download:
A_little_piece_of_SF_heaven.zip (1510 KB)

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