Skip to main content

Startup school

I attended Paul Graham's Startup School this past Saturday. (Thanks to Drew Houston for letting me crash at his place!) I took fairly detailed notes on the speakers; I think this is the most comprehensive overview available, actually. (Note that these are in the order they actually spoke, which isn't quite the same as the plan.)

  1. Langley Steinert, entrepreneur. Short "entrepreneurship 101" talk. Lots of interesting Q&A.
  2. Marc Hedlund, Entrepreneur in Residence, O'Reilly Media. Talks about over a dozen startups he's seen in the last couple years -- most of which you'll recognize -- and why they succeeded.
  3. Qi Lu, VC at Yahoo. One subject: Why yahoo rocks. Total advertorial; skip this one unless you're a yahoo fanboy.
  4. Hutch Fishman, part-time CFO for startups. Talks about VC founds, directors, liquidity. Pretty basic stuff if you've read up on this at all, but his Q&A is worth reading.
  5. Paul Graham, author of entrepreneurship essays, VC, and Lisp fan. This was my first time seeing Paul speak; I was surprised to find out that when one of his essays says "... derived from a talk at ..." it really means "I read this essay at ..." So you might as well read the transcript instead of my notes, up until the Questions section. (Respect to Reg Braithwaite, who stood up to challenge the conventional wisdom that entrepreneurship isn't for people with kids.)
  6. David Cavanaugh, lawyer. Standard slashdot-style IP overview. If you know what the differences are between patent, copyright, trademark, and trade secret, you won't see anything new here.
  7. Michael Mandel, economist. Before the lunch break, I told my friends that this talk was either going to be very interesting or very dull. I'm glad I was right (and it wasn't dull). One of his points is, "The USA has certain systemic advantages that encourage entrepreneurship and growth." But I hesitate to call that his main point, since he talks about a lot more than that. Worth reading.
  8. Steve Wozniak. Sort of a retrospective. I don't know that I learned much, but hey, I got to shake Woz's hand.
  9. Mark Macenka, IP lawyer. Somewhat more useful than the other lawyer's talk. Read the "Founders issues" section.
  10. Stan Reiss, VC. Interesting take on startups from a VC's perspective: when taking VC money is worth it, and when you shouldn't. Long Q&A session.
  11. Stephen Wolfram, founder of the Mathematica company. I figured when I saw shots of cellular automata on the projector while he set up that this wouldn't be about entrepreneurship, and I could tune it out. I was right.
  12. Chris Sacca, head of new business development for Google. As much of a cheerleader as Qi Lu was, but less blatant and more interesting.
  13. Olin Shivers, professor and entrepreneur. Talks about failure and attitude in a Nietsche-ish way. Moved really, really fast; Olin was the only speaker I felt like I couldn't keep up with, note-taking-wise. Catch the video when it goes up. (If you just look at his slides, you'll miss a lot.) Excellent talk.
  14. Summer founders, the guys (all of them were male) who took seed money from Paul's VC firm. Probably most interesting if you're college-age-ish and also thinking about applying to Y Combinator.

See also the slides for those presenters who had them. Supposedly videos will be up eventually.

Of the other blogs I've seen, Fred Ngo's and Robbie Allen have the best speaker coverage.

Thanks to Paul and the speakers for organizing this! I had fun and learned a lot.

Comments

PabloC said…
Thanks for sharing this!

Popular posts from this blog

Python at Mozy.com

At my day job, I write code for a company called Berkeley Data Systems. (They found me through this blog, actually. It's been a good place to work.) Our first product is free online backup at mozy.com . Our second beta release was yesterday; the obvious problems have been fixed, so I feel reasonably good about blogging about it. Our back end, which is the most algorithmically complex part -- as opposed to fighting-Microsoft-APIs complex, as we have to in our desktop client -- is 90% in python with one C extension for speed. We (well, they, since I wasn't at the company at that point) initially chose Python for speed of development, and it's definitely fulfilled that expectation. (It's also lived up to its reputation for readability, in that the Python code has had 3 different developers -- in serial -- with very quick ramp-ups in each case. Python's succinctness and and one-obvious-way-to-do-it philosophy played a big part in this.) If you try it out, pleas...

A week of Windows Subsystem for Linux

I first experimented with WSL2 as a daily development environment two years ago. Things were still pretty rough around the edges, especially with JetBrains' IDEs, and I ended up buying a dedicated Linux workstation so I wouldn't have to deal with the pain.  Unfortunately, the Linux box developed a heat management problem, and simultaneously I found myself needing a beefier GPU than it had for working on multi-vector encoding , so I decided to give WSL2 another try. Here's some of the highlights and lowlights. TLDR, it's working well enough that I'm probably going to continue using it as my primary development machine going forward. The Good NVIDIA CUDA drivers just work. I was blown away that I ran conda install cuda -c nvidia and it worked the first try. No farting around with Linux kernel header versions or arcane errors from nvidia-smi. It just worked, including with PyTorch. JetBrains products work a lot better now in remote development mod...

A review of 6 Python IDEs

(March 2006: you may also be interested the updated review I did for PyCon -- http://spyced.blogspot.com/2006/02/pycon-python-ide-review.html .) For September's meeting, the Utah Python User Group hosted an IDE shootout. 5 presenters reviewed 6 IDEs: PyDev 0.9.8.1 Eric3 3.7.1 Boa Constructor 0.4.4 BlackAdder 1.1 Komodo 3.1 Wing IDE 2.0.3 (The windows version was tested for all but Eric3, which was tested on Linux. Eric3 is based on Qt, which basically means you can't run it on Windows unless you've shelled out $$$ for a commerical Qt license, since there is no GPL version of Qt for Windows. Yes, there's Qt Free , but that's not exactly production-ready software.) Perhaps the most notable IDEs not included are SPE and DrPython. Alas, nobody had time to review these, but if you're looking for a free IDE perhaps you should include these in your search, because PyDev was the only one of the 3 free ones that we'd consider using. And if you aren...