Better Living Through Thinking

Graham: A Student's Guide to Startups

Fri, 15 Dec 2006

More perspicacity from Paul Graham:

<http://www.paulgraham.com/mit.html>

The best place to work, if you want to start a startup, is probably a startup. In addition to being the right sort of experience, one way or another it will be over quickly. You'll either end up rich, in which case problem solved, or the startup will get bought, in which case it it will start to suck to work there and it will be easy to leave, or most likely, the thing will blow up and you'll be free again.

Also:

In technology the difficulty is compounded by the fact that real startups tend to discover the problem they're solving by a process of evolution. Someone has an idea for something; they build it; and in doing so (and probably only by doing so) they realize the problem they should be solving is another one. Even if the professor let you change your project description on the fly, there isn't time enough to do that in a college class, or a market to supply evolutionary pressures. So class projects are mostly about implementation, which is the least of your problems in a startup.

This seems to me one of the major reasons that so-called academic software development models have done so poorly (having worked in a variety of software environments)--they don't connect well with how things really work.

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