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Interesting that it's $500k more than the fund Y Combinator recently announced. Do I sense a little "Y" envy? Either way, it's good that more capital and resources are being allocated to startup stage companies. Can't we all just get along?


Couple of thoughts:

1. Maybe a bit fluffy, but since most mainstream readers don't know about Y Combinator, the first cycle of articles are going to trend positive.

2. I think the Y Combinator ecosystem (the program, demo days, Hacker News) itself is going to prove as disruptive (if not more) as the companies they fund. A disruptive "Ivy League of Startup Schools" is starting to form that I believe will have huge ripple effects on our economy.

3. I agree, mainstream media doesn't understand how much hackers are our era's Robber Barons (or Industrial Statesmen, take your pick). Expect a handful of IPO's and at least one billionaire graduate within the next ten years. I expect Y Combinator graduates and their related companies will have billions of dollars of impact on our economy over this period of time.

4. The traditional University model of education is probably as much at risk by ignoring YC as is big Fortune 500 companies. "The average debt for graduating college seniors who borrow to finance their undergraduate degree is just under $20,000." vs. the avg. YC funded company probably gets funded to the order of $15k - $20k.

"In 2003, workers with bachelor's degrees earned a median of $49,900. Those who'd completed several years of college with no degree had median earnings of $35,700, while those with a high school diploma averaged $30,800."

Don't get me wrong, I understand that not every high school graduate can attend YC or some similar program. But I think our educational system needs to create some alternative tracks for education that are shorter in time frame, more entrepreneurial in nature, and more technically inclined. If we simply diverted 1% of college freshman into such programs, this would translated into over 20,000 individuals. Can you imagine the impact on society of 20k freshman attending some Y Combinator-esque hacker / entrepreneurial program every year?

http://money.cnn.com/2005/10/17/pf/college/college_costs/ind...


>"I agree, mainstream media doesn't understand how much hackers are our era's Robber Barons (or Industrial Statesmen, take your pick). Expect a handful of IPO's and at least one billionaire graduate within the next ten years. I expect Y Combinator graduates and their related companies will have billions of dollars of impact on our economy over this period of time."

I don't think that applies to the guys at the Fool, especially the Rule Breakers. David Gardner got the following he has by investing in AOL in '95, Yahoo! in '96, Amazon.com in '97, Ebay in '98 and telling the world about his picks before he bought them. He's been far ahead of the curve for a long, long time. More recently he's had a number of 5-bagger plus investments in a variety of tech fields.

He's utterly crushed the market over a long haul, done it publicly, and done it almost exclusively in technology.


"Can you imagine the impact on society of 20k freshman attending some Y Combinator-esque hacker / entrepreneurial program every year?"

I'm at the University of Waterloo in Canada, we have something that is (conceptually) similar to your idea, but it falls flat on its face for a few reasons. First, a bit of background:

- It's a residence where entrepreneurial-minded students can apply to live. The hope is that close proximity of a bunch of smart, ambitious people will serve as a pseudo-incubator for startups.

- The residence hosts workshops and invites speakers to shed some insight on the startup process, and hooks students up with technological resources (servers, bandwidth, hardware, etc) to build their projects. The residence takes no stake in any companies.

Now, I was there for its inaugural semester, and the whole thing fails for many reasons:

- Unlike YC, which draws from a pool of talented hackers and businesspeople, the residence draws from a pool of untalented, ambitious dreamers. Of the 70 or so people selected to live there, I can count the number of capable hackers on one hand - the rest were hopelessly unable to code at any level that approaches hacker proficiency. Most people were CS or engineering majors, most people also fail at producing their own side projects. There were people who could write Java, but didn't know what MySQL was - in short, the people there were technically incompetent, and even the ones who were able, didn't have the huge breadth of skills necessary to put on many hats.

This is a problem to most, if not all colleges - the number of people who have the depth and breadth of skill necessary to run a small, lean startup simply do not exist in large enough numbers at a single college. Maybe if 10 schools gathered together they'd have enough talent between them to pull this off.

- Zero business knowledge. The vast majority of the ideas that came out of that place were your standard "build app, pray for users, show ads to them, ???, profit!" formula. There were several econ majors selected to live there, I suppose in hopes that they will provide some business knowledge. They too were clueless about business models and weren't much help at all.

I did meet a couple capable people there that I still keep in touch with, so I suppose it's not all that bad. But IMHO building an incubator during college is a waste of time, especially at the scale you're suggesting. You can't will a successful startup into existence - you need talented people, and good luck finding 20k talented college freshmen with a strong portfolio of past work and entrepreneurial drive.


Can you imagine the impact on society of 20k freshman attending some Y Combinator-esque hacker / entrepreneurial program every year?

I don't think YC could, or would want to, replace college. The average age of founders that get into YC has increased slowly but steadily...it's now about 25, so folks have been out of school for maybe three years, on average. pg has said on more than one occasion that he likes founders who know what they're avoiding (corporate drudgery, primarily) by starting a company, and he's found they're better able to hold the line when things suck (which they always do to some degree during the first few months to a couple of years of a startup).

That said, I think high school kids who show an interest should be given access to resources along the lines of YC. A fellow from Tulane ran an entrepreneurship program at a high school in New Orleans a year or so ago, I think as some sort of project for school, and he raised money via a ChipIn to bring the best of the lot out to Silicon Valley to see it all in action. Several YC companies volunteered to sit down with them for a few hours and talk about the process, and make it seem human and do-able for ordinary non-genius type folks. He also lined up visits to Google and Facebook and a few other valley highlights. I'd be stunned if that didn't have a positive impact on at least a few of those kids (underprivileged kids from poor neighborhoods in this case, but I think it'd work for most kids). Maybe one or two of them have businesses of their own today. So, I think that kind of thing would be great for the economy and great for the kids...but it's not something you could do as an investment company. It would take funding that you don't expect to get back, either donated (perhaps by companies) or grants from the government, and involvement by schools. It's just not something that is going to produce a profitable portfolio...but it could certainly put the kids on the right track.


Good time for Weebly to issue a statement (press release, etc.) calling for all Geocities customers. It's a "Statue of Liberty" moment - "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe a free website" - Be Bold Weebly... call Yahoo out and get some free press.


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