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17 votes
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What Boeing did to all the guys who remember how to build a plane
54 votes -
Why crypto could be green power's unlikely new best friend
13 votes -
What happened when you visited a medieval inn?
11 votes -
Fallen crypto mogul Sam Bankman-Fried sentenced to twenty-five years in US prison
54 votes -
Take Two buys Gearbox and confirms development on new Borderlands game
17 votes -
Lego requests California police department stop using their toy heads to cover suspect mugshots on social media
40 votes -
Visa, Mastercard settle long-running antitrust suit over swipe fees with merchants
20 votes -
They grow your berries and peaches, but often lack one item: insurance
9 votes -
How the entire country of Denmark became a company town – economists warn of "Nokia-style" overdependence on a single sector with Ozempic boom
4 votes -
Ericsson will lay off about 1,200 employees in Sweden as the telecommunications company faces slowed demand for its 5G equipment
9 votes -
After Appalachian hospitals merged into a monopoly, their emergency departments slowed to a crawl
40 votes -
Apple has kept an illegal monopoly over smartphones in US, Justice Department says in antitrust suit
95 votes -
Germany’s solar panel industry, once a leader, is getting squeezed
17 votes -
Sam Bankman-Fried repeatedly lied to get out of “supervillain” US prison term, FTX CEO alleges
32 votes -
CEO of data privacy company Onerep.com (used by the Mozilla Monitor service), founded dozens of people-search firms
44 votes -
Borders book store | Bankrupt
9 votes -
Reddit pops as much as 70% in NYSE debut after selling shares at top of range
37 votes -
Why do some companies borrow and others sell shares?
9 votes -
How to start Google
27 votes -
Why are there so many car washes?
24 votes -
Report finds that financiers providing billion-dollar support for industrial livestock companies to expand leading to unsustainable rise in production
5 votes -
From ocean to plate, the female-led seaweed company Lofoten Seaweed in Norway – in pictures
3 votes -
Boeing whistleblower found dead in US
88 votes -
Refund fraud schemes promoted on TikTok, Telegram are costing Amazon and other retailers billions of dollars
37 votes -
Taps run dry in water crisis in Bangalore India. Citizens and large Information Technology companies struggle to cope.
14 votes -
Any friendly entrepreneurship communities that aren't rotten with the whole "grindset," hustle culture stuff?
I've always been interested in entrepreneurship, and I think I want to get serious about doing something. I checked out the Millionaire Fastlane forums, and it's just completely saturated with the...
I've always been interested in entrepreneurship, and I think I want to get serious about doing something. I checked out the Millionaire Fastlane forums, and it's just completely saturated with the whole "grindset" BS. I tried reading a couple of threads, and my eyes almost rolled out of my head. 🙄
I've also hung around on the entrepreneur subreddit, and it just seems like a bunch of people without much experience trading unproven advice and people trying to sell courses.
Does anyone know of a better community? I'd like to find some friendly, welcoming adults with actual experience to talk with. Are entrepreneurship and hustle culture always a package deal?
34 votes -
How TV went from bad to great
9 votes -
Arrest of Binance executives shakes up Nigeria’s crypto ecosystem, again
11 votes -
'If anything happens, it's not suicide': Boeing whistleblower's prediction before death
52 votes -
Can Reddit survive its own IPO?
22 votes -
‘We’re hemorrhaging money’: US health clinics try to stay open after unprecedented cyberattack
31 votes -
Big Tech must be scared – bigger isn’t necessarily better when it comes to innovation
14 votes -
Stellar Blade developer Shift Up to go public at projected valuation of $2.3 billion
4 votes -
Reddit is letting power users in on its IPO
38 votes -
How sixteen companies are dominating the world’s Google search results (2024 Edition)
24 votes -
It’s me, hi, I’m the problem. I’m 33.
27 votes -
Europe faces 'competitiveness crisis' as US widens [economic] productivity gap
9 votes -
Finally, something to show you
I wanted to give an update to something I wrote about a while back, because i have something to show for it and wanted to express some gratitude. Behold! I used the eraser tool on the bottom part,...
I wanted to give an update to something I wrote about a while back, because i have something to show for it and wanted to express some gratitude.
I used the eraser tool on the bottom part, we have a business line but we're not open yet. When we are I'll have some more pictures and it'll be included.
That old post was the first time I had committed most of that to writing, and it was really encouraging for folks to take an interest, especially Akir's questions. Being asked and writing out the answers helped me clarify further, what I was intending to do and how I would get there. So, for the folks who read that, I wanted to share an update.
I'm really confident about this endeavor. It makes me anxious to say that but I've come to learn the position we're in just could not be better. Part of getting it started is forming an LLC, so I've gotten some time to talk with folks more professionally connected to the town. From what I gather, we don't actually have much direct competition. That's because the local venues are very high priced, and primarily do weddings. With some of them, it sounds like a case of possibly resting on laurels - one story was of a wedding, $10,000, which did not include things like tables and chairs and the house was not clean. Each venue charges quite a lot, I think because they're renting out most of their own supplies. We don't have to do that - we have enough already to accommodate up to around 150 people, and the space can accommodate up to ~350 if they're hanging out outside. We can do an event like that 10k wedding for around 3k with stuff provided.
No one offers stuff that's smaller scale. At least with all the places I researched, it's just weddings. No one really tries to host things like, say, a dinner for a local business, school groups, smaller parties. The first event we're set to do, is a tea party for around 30 people (it's for a little girl's birthday). I got to speak with someone who owns a local accounting firm, and learned from them what we are planning to do is pretty much an unserved market. Folks want to be able to go someplace nice that isn't a restaurant. The lowest priced venue sits around ~$3500, and that's just the price of being there. Bear in mind, this is Brookhaven, MS - it isn't a wealthy place by any stretch. The venues currently operating seem to be relying on folks finding them online, and catering to those higher end kinds of events (again, it's mostly just weddings. Some of them do bed and breakfast but it's clearly not what their branding is about). We have practically no overhead, no loans, no investors, and our plan targets stuff that isn't available but is in regular demand. We're doing a few small events to get some practical knowledge and in May we'll open officially.
There's a separate story in there, of two independent folks figuring out how to live together. Neither of us is used to having someone around to do things. Changing my environment has meant being more productive and motivated, which has been pretty nice. Grandma rocks, that's really all there is to it. It really feels like having chosen to do something at precisely the right time, at least with respect to making the business work. I can't speak to the more lofty goals and ideals, because I haven't gotten far enough yet for those to really enter the picture. Upcoming: Business cards, a pamphlet, posters. There's opportunities for advertising that are either free or quite cheap. The print shop owner can get an ad out to 10,000 in the local area for around $500, which I think will have to be good because they're the only folks doing a mailer. That's the only consistent issue, things just move more slowly here and choice is extremely limited. I came here from a city of ~1m, so I guess I had gotten pretty used to having about a bajillion choices. On the other hand, it's been very easy to get the beginnings of a professional network going. I grew up in a place like this, so getting along is no big deal, and everybody knows everybody. A good first impression means something; a good conversation travels. Folks have loved the idea thus far, and have been nothing but encouraging. I don't ramble about the long term plan with anyone, ya'll are the only folk who really got that. As I go along I intend to see how that all shakes out, give an account of how it takes shape. I appreciate folks checking it out and responding. Happy to report anything you're interested in.
Anyway, that is it for now. I hope to return with some cool stuff from a big reopening party. I wasn't sure where this should go so I figured ~misc would work.
30 votes -
What Boeing’s door-plug debacle says about the future of aviation safety
13 votes -
On International Women's Day, Northern European countries stand out for women who are looking to develop their careers – Iceland secured the top spot
3 votes -
Nikon is acquiring US camera manufacturer RED
21 votes -
Inside Apple Arcade: axed games, declining payouts, disillusioned studios – and an uncertain future
30 votes -
Disney has “killed a few projects” amid studio overhaul, says Bob Iger; “We’ve not been that public about it”
11 votes -
Muji has a prescription for the loneliness epidemic in Japan
10 votes -
Shipper groups sound alarm over Norfolk Southern proxy fight: say activist investors threaten US safety standards
9 votes -
How a woman named “Steve” became one of Britain’s most celebrated IT pioneers, entrepreneurs, and philanthropists
13 votes -
How Vail Resorts sparked the great Northeast ski revolt
7 votes -
Chile puts brakes on Google data center over water use, environmental concerns
17 votes -
Can European carmakers stop China’s electric behemoth BYD?
16 votes