Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | bbirnbaum's comments login

"Before I quit my job, I constantly read books and listened to podcasts about startups. The part that intrigued me most was the boundlessness of possibility."

^ This is me right now. I've struggled to explain to people why I'm interested in entrepreneurship for its own sake (and not because, e.g., I'm passionate about a particular problem). This quote really encapsulates the draw of it for me.

Thanks Michael, just came across your blog recently. Great stuff.


Thanks for reading!

I'm glad that section resonated with you! I spent several hours writing and rewriting that section, trying to articulate what exactly I found so alluring about becoming a founder.

Last year, I considered building software for sheet metal shops,[0] and people warned me that I'd get bored building software for a market I'm not passionate about. But I never felt like that would be true because whatever the business, the part that's fun to me is getting to play with all the little knobs and levers of and seeing whether my choices yielded good results.

[0] https://mtlynch.io/retrospectives/2019/12/#interviewing-mach...


> whatever the business, the part that's fun to me is getting to play with all the little knobs and levers of and seeing whether my choices yielded good results.

I am the exact same way, and yet I struggle to articulate this. People say to me "why would you be excited to own a carwash?" (example biz, I own none right now) and my answer is basically what you said -- its this kind of huge, real world, testing environment/challenge. How can we increase efficiency here? How would modifying the soap mixture affect the cleanliness of the cars? So many inputs and outputs to experiment with, I can't think of anything more interesting....


Metal shops could definitely use some better software. Most don't prioritize it though, because everything has been "good enough" for so long.

A company I worked for had a supplier who cut metal. The owner was hardcore about making money. They wouldn't start cutting until he was devoting 95% of the sheet metal to product, and if the machines stopped cutting for more than 1 minute, an andon light would start flashing. Needless to say, he ran a very tight ship!


That infinite horizon of possibilities is both a positive and a negative. The negative is that you have highly imperfect information and you never know what the optimal thing is that you should be doing next. I've been a solo product developer for >15 years now I can tell you that feeling of uncertainty never goes away. Although I have solved it to some extent by factoeing in enjoyment. Whenever I have 2 possibilities and I don't have a feel for which one will give the best result, I do the one that is more fun!


I use https://cortadomail.com to get RSS feeds (and other sources) in email. I personally really like the workflow of getting a daily digest of all of my RSS feeds in a single email each day. (Disclaimer: I built this tool.)


It pulls essays from the archives. Sounds like I could make that more clear.


So at some point it runs out or keeps posting the same old ones over and over again?


It will just stop when it runs out (until he writes a new one).

The motivation is that PG has a bunch of great writing about startups, etc., but it's a bit hard to go to his website and dive in since there's so much. So this gives it to you in newsletter form, making it easier to set up a habit of reading a little bit at a time.


Haha. These are real essays from the archives.


Consider applying for YC's Spring batch! Applications are open till Feb 11.

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

Search: