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Why not?


All I can imagine is if all of humanity had equal access to knowledge then we would work toward the next goal. Which would maybe cause the singularity or prove non-duality in some way that would settle beings into the next level of evolution? Or it is Siri but slave edition. Depends on who takes over.


Do whatever you can to move forward. Every time you start getting anxiety, stop. If you can do it harder, while taking care of you, do it harder. If you are doing your best, but still thinks its slow, don't try to force the situation. Sometimes negative results lead to better results. Just keep trying.


We were lucky enough to not be able to raise money every time we wanted.

That made us improve every action and work harder on every situation so we can have a better connection with what we are building.

So, money is something that we always think that could help, but sometimes you can only find secrets without it.

Raise or not to raise. That's the question.


Well done


It’s about time to change the game


If you don’t take high risk you can’t have high returns.


Why not? You can have a lot of “potential energy” stored up and make sure you don’t fail because you have endless opportunities to try high-return ventures.

This happens because software has near-zero marginal cost to copy.

Take for example https://worldaftercapital.com written by a VC

Or https://qbix.com/token ecosystem which aims to achieve a new economic model for open source projects


I agree with this skepticism. There is no strict link between high risk and high return.

Microsoft was not high risk (as noted by Gates), and it provided a return that is so large it might as well be off the scale for the purposes of this discussion (their market cap was recently up around $1.3 trillion; Gates will have pulled over a hundred billion dollars out of his ownership in the company over ~45-50 years).

- Microsoft had very high margins from the beginning. They operated thin and were very cash rich within the first few years. Just a few years in, Gates had Microsoft hoarding multiple $500,000 government bonds (~$1.5m in today's money) from accumulated profit, because they were already very profitable (there is a story about the secretary misplacing one of these bonds).

- Microsoft was founded for relatively little money - $10,000 - and with zero outside VC money. Gates & Allen came up with that capital from working various industry jobs in the prior years.

- They nailed down a serious customer (MITS) and then founded a company, rather than the other way around (found a company and then try to find business for it).

- Sales went from $16,000 in 1976 (first months of operation), to $8m for 1980, and $17m in 1981 with 40 employees ($17m is $50m inflation adjusted). Three years in they were gushing cash.


Why not?

Because low risk companies are always relatively easy to copy, so as soon as you see any success you'll have clones pop up and take market share, which will lower your returns.

Any business where the risk is low is, by definition, not doing anything other people can't do. If only you can do it then you have to build the market yourself, which would represent a high risk.


The first link looks interesting, but I was turned off a bit by the implication that land scarcity was only and issue when we were an agrarian society; current housing prices are a pretty clear signal that land scarcity is very much still a thing.


True. But all those failed adventures bring down your average return on investment.

There must be a class of businesses that have half the risk and half the profits compared to the businesses that VCs accept. From an investment point of view, the ROI would be the same, but VCs wouldn't invest. How do those people get money to fund their businesses?


Giving new businesses with no assets and no cash flow unsecured capital is inherently risky. It only makes sense if there’s a potential for outsize returns.

The only thing that would make an investment like this less risky is collateral, not worse potential returns.


I STR that relationship's been challenged in recent years.


Too many tools, once you get used to one, a better one arrives in


Alright, but who cares? Just use your old tool until it's beyond your expertise to maintain it or you want something else, then move on.

The feature treadmill makes sense if you're trying to sell a piece of software; but for the most part, a tool that was good enough for building blogs eight years ago is still good enough now.


User expectations, economics and the market all change in that time.

In the blog, the author mentions a need for using a "premium plan" for publishing his WP blog to protect it from being taken down by large spikes in traffic. That premium plan changed the economics of his blog, and the plan gets more expensive with time making his content less profitable.


I can say that people like humans way better than bots. We have an app that looks like a bot but is a real person, and we say it at the beginning, but people don’t believe. Once they figure it out, they go crazy. It’s always local people by the way. So I think at some point, bots should be at least explain what they are without pretending they are humans.


The thing is everyone who thinks AI will be AI in our times are people that don´t understand what really AI is.


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