Not really. I was a hobbyist sketcher/painter up till high school and then didn't have time for it when I went to university other than a few random spurts. I felt like I wanted to bring back this passion of mine after a good 10 years of being away from it. I had also been feeling completely addicted to capturing moments on my phone/DSLR and wanted to channel that desire to capture into something more creative and challenging.
1) They naively structured Facebook in the early days, and Peter Theil had them restructure. Then Eduardo didn't move, so his stock didn't vest. That cost Zuck billions (according to his offhand comment).
2) When there was a problem, nobody would be allowed to leave. They don't do that anymore (because it's illegal), but teams sometimes commit themselves to it on their own.
3) People don't want to write him a check, but they also feel too bad to outrightly say "no". So, he had a ton of "they're about to write us a check"s, yet nobody ever did.
4) He wants us to show the world the benefits of SV's way of doing things. However, imposing it would upset people. Rather, we should be enticing them by showing them what it could be like.
Using less detail definitely looks better. I noticed that when my window is ~950 pixels wide, though, I lose the names above each person as the display scrolls down. I found the names helpful for understanding who someone was, as I didn't decipher all of the doodled versions perfectly.
Simply want to join my voice to others by saying this is amazing and the design is very inspiring. It is simple, informative, and feels personal. Kudos!
Beautifully implemented. If it's not too much to ask, please consider making public the source code behind the display and design - really gorgeous way of showing a collection of notes.
Beautiful! Did you tweet it? Can you post the link?
We are curating a list of the best content on theneeds [1] and I'd like to add this one (we only import feeds or tweets).
I took the courtesy to convert these into pdf slides (for easier reading on iDevices, etc) you can download them from here (http://blog.websecurify.com/uploads/aa_StartupSchool.pdf) for now but it will be great if Gregory puts them on his website next to the github link.
Great format, simple execution and presentation for us who were unable to attend, lots of valuable insights.
I think the theme that stands out for me personally from all of these notes is: Find something you can work on almost non-stop, expect to fail a lot (because you will), learn and adapt, keep trying.
Wait, where's the affiliate link? I don't see it anywhere.
Small comment about the site: looks great and well-made, I just wish that every next page click didn't populate browser history, such that I needed to hit 'back' 10 times to get back to where I was.
Great Job! All of the startup school notes being posted on the internet have helped me make up a little bit for not being able to attend startup school 2013!
haha I wanted to include it, but I left that out because he didn't actually mean it -- he was quoting someone else and it was bad (albeit probably true) advice. Hard to convey all that in a simple doodle.
Mark was talking about how he always envisioned a way to connect people. And he was citing examples of early hacks he made in college. Of course, his most notorious one was the "FaceMash" hack, the one the movie, "The Social Network," put a lot of emphasis on. Hence, Mark was venting a little frustration that his other notable achievements went largely unnoticed by the public.
I've been doing them every year ( http://gkoberger.net/m/startup-school ); would love to eventually do something like that. I wouldn't want to make money; maybe I could donate proceeds to Watsi?
It looks really nice, but there might be a problem for someone reading these notes who didn't actually watch startup school. For example in Watsi's section you write "Worst part about being a non-profit: Nobody says NO", that could be a sarcastic comment, or it could be a problem of too much funding, or it could be it's actually meaning that everybody actually says no, but just not to his face. Also, the starting quotes without ending quotes drive me a little crazy, but that's just a personal thing.
In context, Chase Adam said something like "The worst part about being a non-profit: everybody is like 'yeah, this is really cool', but they don't write a check. Nobody says 'NO'."
Everyone is praising you on the look/feel of your website, which I agree is pretty cool; however, the content of what "people" learned from the conference seems all but completely useless (unless the conference sucked that much that all you got out of each speaker was a couple of 1 liner's??). Not sure if you were serious about the content or just messing around to demo your website.
I don't think the idea here is to transcribe everything that got said during the conference. Ideas which translated well into doodles have been captured here. Not to mention what qualifies as "completely useless" is highly subjective.
I made a few sketches myself as part of a larger project I'm working on (a year without cameras): http://crafture.me/post/64711241777/startup-school-2013