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I'm two weeks into readings from @phil's Silicon Valley Canon book course. It's great. Here are some select takeaways. --- The story of great v0s being built in a couple days is laughably common. - Gmail - "1 day" - Viaweb – "a couple days" - Ebay - "one long weekend" And they were simple too: Paul Graham's viaweb, an e-commerce platform, launched without the ability to process payments. You couldn't process a credit card transaction until 2 years after launch. eBay launched without the ability facilitate payments, it couldn’t even guarantee the buyers paid the sellers, just list and bid. Reviews were in a forum, separate from the bidding experience. https://jtgi.xyz/posts/sv-canon-i/
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Many founders in the dotcom era allowed professional CEOs to come in around IPO time. For example: netscape, yahoo, ebay, google to name a few. That's a big cultural difference given how essential the role of founder CEO is now.
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The Manhattan project was yet another example of how effective it is to get folks of different disciplines in a single space to collaborate when going zero to one. I've found the same repeatedly throughout my career that specialization and silos aren't optimal for innovation.
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Growing up there were AOL free trial discs in random drawers and piles all over my house. I knew it was a common shared experience of that era but I understand why now. There direct mail campaign was insanely successful: 10% of people received the disk, put it in their computer, signed up, and entered their credit card number. This is pre web too where I would have expected many to be cautious with their credit card information.
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