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threeseed

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threeseed
·last year·discuss
> https://www.cursor.com/downloads

Linux builds are in the AppImage format.

Which makes a lot more sense to me than deb/rpm when it's just a single executable.
threeseed
·last year·discuss
I have zero issue with YC's investment thesis.

I have an issue with the way they continue to market themselves as being altruistic and a defender of startup founders everywhere rather than your run of the mill predatory, self-interested SF VC.
threeseed
·last year·discuss
If you look at the batch data [1] it is very clear that there is either an investment thesis or some inherent bias in how they choose startups. Since Garry Tan took over it is now heavily favoured towards (a) SF based, (b) young, (c) AI centric.

And if you look at the partner YouTube videos you see why. There is a concerning lack of diversity in how they see the world i.e. they are all very much the e/acc types.

[1] https://www.walturn.com/insights/in-depth-analysis-trends-in...
threeseed
·last year·discuss
YC and an average Seed round only gives you enough money for a small team for 18 months.

Anyone who is half-decent is going to be expensive.
threeseed
·last year·discuss
> will have died by being acquired for less than the most recent valuation, meaning YC lost money on the deal

Does YC really lose money on all acquihires ?

Because it seems like most of the batches look to be purpose built for it.
threeseed
·last year·discuss
I would imagine so.

a) Almost all of the other incubators are just awful. Either they are predatory, ineptly managed or simply not well capitalised enough to offer a competitive product.

b) YC is able to rest on its laurels i.e. they can/do market how well AirBnb, Stripe etc have done. And so their funnel of talent is by far the best.

c) That said, YC is the worst I've ever seen it. And Garry Tan is mostly to blame although it's been trending downwards for a while. It's now as if Jake Paul ran an incubator: very hype driven, cynical, focused on easily exploitable young 20s males.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
If you haven't quit your job and aren't working on full-time don't apply to YC.

The partners have said on many occasions it's a major red flag for them.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
> but the ones that succeed can win really big

May. Not can.

There is no evidence yet that AI is anything other than a feature.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
I know someone who was in a recent batch.

He said that 95% of the batch are between 20 and 30, mostly AI and mostly US.

There are exceptions to the rule but let's not pretend there isn't a YC thesis.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
Notes data is stored in an open SQLite3 database as Protocol Buffer data:

sqlite3 "~/Library/Group Containers/group.com.apple.notes/NoteStore.sqlite"

This is because it needs to support CRDT style syncing.

But the schemas have been decoded so you can access it using pretty much any language.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
It's amazing how people think Project Management = Issues (and only issues).

Release Management is a fundamental part of IT Project Management. So of course companies use Jira to track releases. And of course you can tie milestones and OKRs to releases. And of course tickets can have small amounts of text content associated with them. How else would you describe the ticket without them ?

But the idea of Jira being remotely like a Confluence style wiki is just ridiculous.

And your comment is out of some parallel universe where Jira is Confluence.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
a) Support tickets, sprint planning, kanban etc are all part of project management.

b) It can't manage your pipelines. It can visualise deployments and link them to work but you still need some sort of CI/CD tool like Bitbucket, Github etc.

c) It is not an anything app. I can't use it as a wiki, CRM, database, calendar etc.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
> A tool that tries to be everything to everyone

Jira doesn't try to be everything. It's a project management app. It does nothing else.

Notion is wiki, CRM, project management, calendar etc.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
Actually today's Confluence is much better than Notion in my opinion.

It has a built in Figma style diagram/flow-chart editor which is handy for architecture documents, infinite array of plugins and the interface is simple, clean and focused.

Notion has become this kitchen sink app where even editing a table is a convoluted mess of an experience.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
Was a WebObjects developer back in the late 90s: $100k/license adjusted for inflation.

Out of the box arguably still better than today’s web stacks.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
Because ORM libraries were invented 30 years ago.

There is no requirement to learn SQL for most of the applications built today.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
Never understood why I would want to use this over an NLP+ORM system.

At least with that you get 100% accuracy at the expense of having to use a fixed syntax.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
YC approval process is pretty much this:

- Do I even understand your idea.

- Have you talked to customers.

- Am I impressed in your use of time.

- Do I believe that your team is capable of delivering.

- Is it a good idea.

Most people can't get past the first two but obsess over the last two.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
No investor is going to give you specific feedback.

Your best bet is to go to onto Reddit, Discord etc, find the startup communities and ask for advice there. There are a lot of people who want to support other founders. Or even better go on Linkedin, find some prospective customers and ask them for advice. I've had about 10% of people reply back some with page long answers.

If you are willing to spend money there are plenty of services like Kintell, Intro.co which will allow you to book an hour with investors or successful founders. But there are plenty of free options that I would start with first.
threeseed
·2 years ago·discuss
YC has apparently been helping many founders get the O-1 visa.

And there are plenty of services that allow you to manage US companies remotely.