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I've been reading J&M being compared to Steve Jobs with the iPhone announcement during CES.
and now @6pm "it seemed fairly tactless"
set's a new record for half-life to flip-flop
All I can add is that we appreciate our blog for your (Roberts) opinions. The soap opera stuff (well said Tris) is for the rest.
I used to run conferences and if someone announced a new conference that competed with mine while running around the hall inside mine, I'd be pissed.
Part of having a conversation online about marketplaces and such is getting everything out on the table so we can discuss it openly and move on.
Mike made a big deal about his employee announcing an event while at a competitive conference. That deserves to be discussed and I needed to explain that I was uncomfortable with that.
There's a word, dignity. Try it some time.
one is for those brilliant startups that are relatively more financed ...
One is for those brilliant startups that have very little capitol ...
But, Brilliance is Brillance
Web 2.0 is about information sharing - politics is for those traditional, old business models
Most of these Start-ups are also offering optional FREE version of their services - so everyone benefits by knowing about them.
Lets take the politics OUT of Web 2.0
It's not about x guy trying to outdo y guy or disrespecting him in anyway...it's really not about x and y guys at all.
*'You're so vain' song pops into her head*
"Many tech conferences today allow startups to pitch ... although there is almost always a hefty fee involved that ranges from thousands to tens of thousands of dollars. DEMO, where I am currently, is probably the quintessential example of this model. The entire conference is paid startup demos. There are way too many to digest—60—and it is a well known secret that if you are willing to pay the $15,000+ fee, your startup will really need to suck to be turned down ... I’m not sure the startups or attendees attending get much out of it other than a great networking event. There are too many startups for press to give even passing coverage to many of them, and attendees are lost in a sea of pitches that all begin to blur together ... there is a serious conflict of interest at the conference level ... Attendees don’t know if they’re really seeing the best startups, or just the best startups that are willing to pay the exorbitant participation fee. A few (or a lot of) duds always make their way in."
Here's Mike on firing Sam Sethi: "“This is driven entirely from Sam’s ethical lapse in trashing a competitor while simultaneously promoting his own events.”
Sheesh.
@ 14: Paul...no, but the point is that money is the currency of credibility at the moment - if you have the money to get to this stage: either someone is already funding you because THEY think it is a good idea or you are so confident that it IS a good idea, that you will gladly fund it yourself.
I think you mean, "if Mike had asked me for advice".