Agreed. This looks like a lot of fun. My company (a traditional swag distributor) is working on an ecommerce site at SwagExpert.com. It's being built using real-time data on almost a million products (including apparel) that comes from an industry provider's API.
I like how this not only provides the product data but a mechanism for manufacturing and fulfillment as well. Very clever.
Good to see you here, Frank. We met a few months ago at SXSW and I rock the shirt you gave me regularly.
I was an Ambrosia super-fan as a kid. Loved reading The Ambrosia Times (helped me discover Arizona Ginseng Iced Tea, the cobalt bottle). Also had a good time doing some beta testing. I hope they can pull out of the rut.
Someone that lives in another country isn't necessarily of a different race. If races were defined by country, then you couldn't call discrimination (by Americans of European descent) against African Americans racism as they would be both of the same 'race.'
From the post, it doesn't sound like it stopped him from doing business this time, so that just seems like a very forced segue into the political rant.
And even if he did, that would just be his personal choice, not something the government is actually doing to his business. As I said, it's a tenuous connection. I personally agree with his politics, but until the government actually does something to interfere with his business, I don't see how it's strongly related.
By the time you learn how to code well, someone else will have brought your idea to market with better execution. Stick to what you're good at (business in your case) and hire a programmer to do what he is good at.
I'm not a programmer, but it didn't keep me from releasing Audio Footnote (audiofootnote.com).
a) 1 (Audio Footnote, http://audiofootnote.com)
b) 1 paid, 0 free
c) ~$200 on Google and Facebook ads. Plenty of emailing to blogs. Small email list. A few reviews on app blogs but nothing huge.
d) negligible income, but I am still in the red on development and marketing costs so I would not call it income. Here's hoping something positive happens;-)
I like how this not only provides the product data but a mechanism for manufacturing and fulfillment as well. Very clever.
Good to see you here, Frank. We met a few months ago at SXSW and I rock the shirt you gave me regularly.