Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | 2013-05-24login
Stories from May 24, 2013
Go back a day, month, or year. Go forward a day, month, or year.
1.Improving the security of your SSH private key files (kleppmann.com)
330 points by martinkl on May 24, 2013 | 101 comments
2.The Shortest Crashing C Program (llbit.se)
270 points by cfj on May 24, 2013 | 89 comments
3.Too scared to write a line of code (medium.com/i-m-h-o)
219 points by whosbacon on May 24, 2013 | 128 comments
4.VNC over gif (github.com/sidorares)
206 points by waxzce on May 24, 2013 | 49 comments
5.Yahoo submits bid for Hulu (allthingsd.com)
198 points by jmduke on May 24, 2013 | 168 comments
6.Ifs and &&s and Plan 9's Source Code (computationallyendowed.com)
190 points by jneen on May 24, 2013 | 138 comments
7.B go beyond – Quadcopter/RC car combo (kickstarter.com)
191 points by neonkiwi on May 24, 2013 | 51 comments
8.Deleted my portfolio, made $30k in my first six months (wpengine.com)
182 points by jdminhbg on May 24, 2013 | 72 comments
9.The Day our investors came to see the office (2011) (thedayseries.tumblr.com)
174 points by treester on May 24, 2013 | 64 comments
10.Ask HN: and now what?
169 points by shameonme on May 24, 2013 | 85 comments
11.BitMessage - Bitcoin Inspired Peer to Peer Encrypted Messaging (bitmessage.org)
169 points by ericb on May 24, 2013 | 64 comments
12.The Fallacy of Money As A Means (life-longlearner.com)
158 points by scottbrit on May 24, 2013 | 124 comments
13.Stop Validating Email Addresses With Your Complex Regex (davidcel.is)
155 points by master_dee on May 24, 2013 | 201 comments
14.Visualize How CSS Rules Interact with a Page (benjaminbenben.com)
143 points by uptown on May 24, 2013 | 23 comments
15.“Printcrime” by Cory Doctorow (craphound.com)
135 points by DoubleMalt on May 24, 2013 | 77 comments
16.Teenagers Hate Facebook, but They're Not Logging Off (slate.com)
127 points by duggieawesome on May 24, 2013 | 120 comments
17.The oldest "0" in India for which one can assign a definite date (ams.org)
119 points by richeyrw on May 24, 2013 | 28 comments
18.Advanced Go Concurrency Patterns [video] (golang.org)
121 points by enneff on May 24, 2013 | 15 comments
19.The real origins of Tumblr (dailydot.com)
115 points by jamesbritt on May 24, 2013 | 27 comments
20.8.2 magnitude earthquake off Russia with potential to generate a tsunami (noaa.gov)
108 points by hgezim on May 24, 2013 | 56 comments
21.Layer Trees vs. Flat Drawing: Graphics Performance Across iOS Device Generations (floriankugler.com)
101 points by floriankugler on May 24, 2013 | 29 comments
22.Dangerous pieces of startup advice (venturevillage.eu)
100 points by adityar on May 24, 2013 | 29 comments
23.Google 'kerning' easter egg (google.com)
97 points by soupboy on May 24, 2013 | 29 comments
24.Belief in black magic persists in Papua New Guinea (theglobalmail.org)
94 points by playhard on May 24, 2013 | 87 comments
25.Can Someone Turn Me On? (tokbox.com)
94 points by changdizzle on May 24, 2013 | 33 comments
26.Machine Learning with F# (fsharp.org)
84 points by sytelus on May 24, 2013 | 18 comments
27.Ask HN: How to contribute to open source projects?
83 points by bookshelf on May 24, 2013 | 33 comments
28.Angular service or factory? (iffycan.blogspot.com)
83 points by iffycan on May 24, 2013 | 14 comments
29.Inside Pixar's Leadership (scottberkun.com)
80 points by rodriguezcommaj on May 24, 2013 | 7 comments

I'm desperate.

You may think you're desperate, but you're not. Keep reading...

I'm almost 38. Start programming at 10. Spent 7 years in video game industry as programmer, project manager, CTO.

None of that matters. Today is Day 0.

I tried during 5 years to create a "startup".

You don't "create a startup". You supply solutions to other people's problems. When you do that properly, a "startup" is often the byproduct. Focus on their needs, not yours, and allow the "startup" to evolve to what it should become instead of pushing some preconceived notion.

I still have a half time job that pay the bill and give me enough time to create something.

That's great! Fantastic, in fact. You have the best of all world's: enough income, enough time, and enough connections to other things and people to supply yourself with plenty of demands to supply. You're ahead of 95% of others already. So please stop feeling "desperate" and harness the excellent position you're already in.

During these 5 years I created a game, a tool for geeks, a B2B project and lot of more things. I created some projects alone, with CEO partners, CTO partners. Each time, I have no traction, negative feedback, I demotivating and then I stop the project.

a. Focus on what someone else needs. b. Limit the number of others and needs to streamline that focus. c. Work alone as long as you can. You may surprise yourself at how much you can accomplish.

I read too much about pretotyping, MVP, lean startup, marketing.

Then stop reading and start doing. When you reach the point where you don't know how to do something that you must do, then reach for help, reading or otherwise, but not before then. Allow yourself to be pulled by your customer's demands, not pushed by what you think you should be doing.

Now I don't even know what to do.

Find a customer.

All ideas I have seems already made by someone else, and often better than I planned to do them.

That's a good thing! You want other people's great ideas. It's your execution, not their idea, that will be your key to success.

Each partners I meet seems too newbie to work with.

Then work alone and learn what you have do when you need to.

It's horrible because I have time and skills to do lot of things but nothing motivate me anymore.

That's because you're too focused on yourself, and not enough on others. Concentrate on satisfying someone else's needs by supplying something excellent. That's almost always enough motivation. You'll see.

I think all those failures killed me and now I'm lost. What a waste.

They weren't failures, but necessary learning experiences to get where you are now. Thomas Edison, Walt Disney, and Colonel Saunders all "failed" many more times than you have before they succeeded. And each one of them would tell you that those "failures" were necessary but not sufficient for success.

Take a deep breath, get rid of you're stinkin' thinkin', regroup, find a customer, and build something great. We both know you can do it. Best wishes.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: