Posts filed under Technology

Kiva.org

I found Kiva.org to be a strangely addictive way to do "charity" 1. It is microfinance lending so it is not "really" charity. Default rates are very low as with most of microfinance so you can recycle your money through to various people working on small businesses.

2. The immediacy of reading the micro business plans is pure honey to a business geek like me

3. The price points are low, starting at $25, so it you can experiment painlessly.

A few days ago, I apparently made a very minor contribution to capital improvements in a small cafe in Ukraine. The paragraph that clinched me is below - This would bring joy to even the most conservative banker's heart.

Oksana has perfect credit history with Nadiya Ukraine. She has repaid ten different loans without any delinquencies. She is requesting a loan of $1000 to purchase some new equipment for her café. Oksana hopes that modern technologies will help her business operate more efficiently and generate additional profit as a result.

Ok, updates as I learn more about being a retail banker. Yet another organization that would not be possible without the web. We are at year 10 of a 30 year cycle in what a global communications platform is going to cause in terms of changes.

Posted on November 4, 2007 and filed under Technology.

Startups, Age and Going For It

120px-baby_boy_3_month_old.jpg

Paul Graham, the co-founder of Y Combinator writes about why Not Not do a startup, particularly if you are young and don't have a family and goes through 16 (!) reasons people think not to do a startup and analyzes them.

Lots of good stuff.

The full long essay can be found here.

Excerpt is below.

The other thing that's going to be different is my approach. Instead of being positive, I'm going to be negative. Instead of telling you "come on, you can do it" I'm going to consider all the reasons you aren't doing it, and show why most (but not all) should be ignored. We'll start with the one everyone's born with.

1. Too young

A lot of people think they're too young to start a startup. Many are right. The median age worldwide is about 27, so probably a third of the population can truthfully say they're too young.

What's too young? One of our goals with Y Combinator was to discover the lower bound on the age of startup founders. It always seemed to us that investors were too conservative here—that they wanted to fund professors, when really they should be funding grad students or even undergrads.

The main thing we've discovered from pushing the edge of this envelope is not where the edge is, but how fuzzy it is. The outer limit may be as low as 16. We don't look beyond 18 because people younger than that can't legally enter into contracts. But the most successful founder we've funded so far, Sam Altman, was 19 at the time.

Sam Altman, however, is an outlying data point. When he was 19, he seemed like he had a 40 year old inside him. There are other 19 year olds who are 12 inside.

There's a reason we have a distinct word "adult" for people over a certain age. There is a threshold you cross. It's conventionally fixed at 21, but different people cross it at greatly varying ages. You're old enough to start a startup if you've crossed this threshold, whatever your age.

How do you tell? There are a couple tests adults use. I realized these tests existed after meeting Sam Altman, actually. I noticed that I felt like I was talking to someone much older. Afterward I wondered, what am I even measuring? What made him seem older?

One test adults use is whether you still have the kid flake reflex. When you're a little kid and you're asked to do something hard, you can cry and say "I can't do it" and the adults will probably let you off. As a kid there's a magic button you can press by saying "I'm just a kid" that will get you out of most difficult situations. Whereas adults, by definition, are not allowed to flake. They still do, of course, but when they do they're ruthlessly pruned.

The other way to tell an adult is by how they react to a challenge. Someone who's not yet an adult will tend to respond to a challenge from an adult in a way that acknowledges their dominance. If an adult says "that's a stupid idea," a kid will either crawl away with his tail between his legs, or rebel. But rebelling presumes inferiority as much as submission. The adult response to "that's a stupid idea," is simply to look the other person in the eye and say "Really? Why do you think so?"

There are a lot of adults who still react childishly to challenges, of course. What you don't often find are kids who react to challenges like adults. When you do, you've found an adult, whatever their age.

Posted on April 7, 2007 and filed under Technology.

This is a winner

Geni logo

I give an enthusiastic thumbs up to www.Geni.com.

Remarkably easy to use geneology tool with some social networking aspects built in. Better seen than described.

Something like this will not compete with a major social network but is a great example of a superb niche application and the value of a great GUI, even in a well-established category (geneology).

Posted on April 5, 2007 and filed under Online Media, Technology.