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5 votes
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The business of winding down startups is booming
15 votes -
The dirty little secret that could bring down Big Tech
39 votes -
Are we stuck on a innovation plateau - and did startups burn through fifteen years of venture capital with nothing to show for?
The theses I would like to discuss goes as follows (and I'm paraphrasing): during the last 15 years, low interest rates made billions of dollars easily available to startups. Unfortunately, this...
The theses I would like to discuss goes as follows (and I'm paraphrasing): during the last 15 years, low interest rates made billions of dollars easily available to startups. Unfortunately, this huge influx of venture capital has led to no perceivable innovation.
Put cynically, the innovation startups have brought us across the last 15 years can be summarized as (paraphrasing again):
- An illegal hotel chain destroying our cities
- An illegal taxi company exploiting the poor
- Fake money for criminals
- A plagiarism machine/fancy auto-complete
Everything else is either derivative or has failed.
I personally think spaceX has made phenomenal progress and would have probably failed somewhere along the way without cheap loans. There's also some biotech startups (like the mRNA vaccines that won the race to market during covid) doing great things, but often that's just the fruits of 20 years of research coming to fruition.
Every other recent innovation I can think of came from a big player that would have invested in the tech regardless, and almost all of it is "just" incremental improvements on several decades old ideas (I know, that's what progress looks like most of the time).
What do you think? Do you have any counterexamples? Can you think of any big tech disruptions after quantitative easing made money almost free in 2008?
And if you, like me, feel like we're stuck on a plateau - why do you think that is?
83 votes -
Let's reminisce about the time when tech subsidized the cost of living
It's pretty clear that those times are over, but I'm sure many of us remember the heydays of VC funded tech extravagance. These are the ones that come to my mind, hoping to hear others experience....
It's pretty clear that those times are over, but I'm sure many of us remember the heydays of VC funded tech extravagance. These are the ones that come to my mind, hoping to hear others experience.
- At one point, uberpool was cheaper than the cost of public transport in the city.
- No sales tax on Amazon!
- So many promotions and code to get you to join in on their platform. This was also before they try to get you to subscribe to their monthly plans.
17 votes -
Reddit is raising up to $700M in Series F funding, at a valuation of over $10 billion
23 votes -
A story about losing $10M on a to-do list startup
@Andrew Wilkinson: This is a story about how I lost $10,000,000 by doing something stupid.Ten. Million. Dollars.Literally up in smoke. Money bonfire.That's enough to retire with $250,000+ in annual income.Here's what happened...
14 votes -
Substack has raised a $65 million Series B funding round, at a $650 million valuation
10 votes -
Microsoft in talks to buy Discord for more than $10 billion
39 votes -
Reddit has raised $368 million in Series E funding, at a $6 billion valuation
15 votes -
Arlan Hamilton is building a new kind of venture capital - An interview with the founder of Backstage Capital
3 votes -
Discord raises another $100M in venture capital ($480M total now) at a valuation of $7 billion
11 votes -
Helsinki rides the Slush wave toward a booming startup future – six venture capitalists share their thoughts on Finland's tech ecosystem
6 votes -
Patreon raises another $90 million in Series E funding at a valuation of $1.2 billion
12 votes -
Silicon Valley has deep pockets for African startups – if you’re not African
10 votes -
Stack Overflow has raised $85 million in Series E funding
9 votes -
What tech companies need to do before ‘solving’ urban problems
7 votes -
1Password has raised $200 million from Accel
16 votes -
DEV (dev.to) raises an $11.5 million Series A
6 votes -
Sentry raises $40 million Series C from Accel and New Enterprise Associates
3 votes -
Automattic (owner of Wordpress) raises $300 million at $3 billion valuation from Salesforce Ventures
5 votes -
GitLab announces $268 million in Series E funding, at a valuation of $2.75 billion
13 votes -
The fall of Mic was a warning - Lessons from the death of a venture-backed, Facebook-dependent, millennial-focused news site
8 votes -
Patreon raises $60M series D, targets international growth and more customization
9 votes -
Imgur has raised $20M from Coil, a micropayment tool for creators that Imgur has agreed to build into its service
14 votes -
OpenAI, after announcing that their language model was "too good to release", have moved most of their staff into a corporation "capped at 100x returns on investment".
16 votes -
Many companies like Lyft and Uber are going public without having profits - The last time this was so common was in 2000, right before the dot-com bubble burst
15 votes -
Reddit raises $300 million at $3 billion valuation - interview with Steve Huffman
31 votes -
Tim O'Reilly: The fundamental problem with Silicon Valley’s favorite growth strategy
17 votes -
Reddit is raising another $150 million to $300 million in venture capital
53 votes -
Gaming chat startup Discord raises another $150M, surpassing $2B valuation
14 votes -
VC folks talk about social media, community, and the failings - includes ex-product head of YouTube
3 votes -
Reddit founder Alexis Ohanian has $225 million in fresh funding to back health and elder tech startups
9 votes -
$100 million was once big money for a start-up. Now, it’s common
8 votes