Archive for December, 2007|Monthly archive page
Andreessen on Drive
Excerpt from a great post over on Marc Andreessen’s blog. Definitely worth reading:
When I was 10 [in 1928] I wanted to make movies…
I had seen a picture called Wings — the first and only silent picture to win the Academy Award — with Clara Bow… and a new fella named Gary Cooper [who subsequently became a huge star]. I went and just fell in love with that picture. It was a Paramount picture playing at the Paramount Theater [at the time, the studios owned the theaters] in Jacksonville. I had seen that it said Adolph Zukor Presents, so I was in awe of Adolph Zukor [the founder and CEO of Paramount]. I spoke to the manager of the theater that day [to see] if he would give me a job. And he gave me a job handing out leaflets…
After four years in the job [he was then 14] I eventually met Adolph Zukor… when he came to Jacksonville. I asked him to let me come to Hollywood to work for him. He said, “Well, you’re just a kid, but you’ve been working for Paramount now for four years at the theater. So you finish high school, keep in touch, and I’ll hire you when you get out of high school.”
Now that was extremely kind of him… when he said to keep in touch and finish high school, my main objective then was to finish high school. But the most important thing was writing him a letter every Sunday. He didn’t tell me to write him every Sunday, he just told me to keep in touch. So I wrote him every Sunday for four years.
He didn’t write back — I didn’t hear from him but it didn’t matter. I never lost confidence or lost courage. I just knew he was looking forward to my letter each week as much as I was looking forward to writing him.
One day Gary Cooper came to my hometown. I was writing movie news for the hometown paper. I saw Mr. Cooper and I told him I would be out here in Hollywood to work at Paramount as soon as I got out of high school. And there again, for some reason, he took a quick liking to me. I told him about my letters to Zukor every Sunday and he asked me what I would be writing about this week, and I said, “Oh, about meeting you, Mr. Cooper.”
So he said, “Give me a piece of paper.” So he… wrote a note to Adolph Zukor saying, “I’m looking forward to seeing this kid on the lot.” So I wrote to Mr. Zukor telling him I had met Gary Cooper and enclosed the note to him.
Then I heard from Mr. Zukor indirectly. A woman named Sidney Brecker, who was his secretary, wrote to me and said, “Mr. Zukor has been receiving your letters. But he feels that you don’t have to write every week. If you wrote once every three or four or five months, that would be enough.”
Well, that didn’t discourage me at all. I continued to write to Mr. Zukor every Sunday. But I also had a new pigeon, Sidney Brecker, his secretary. So I wrote her every Sunday too. My whole main objective all week was what I was going to write to Mr. Zukor. Then I had to write another original letter to Sidney Brecker…
I wrote [Zukor] a letter every Sunday for four years, keeping in touch. The day I got out of high school [in 1936, in the heart of the Great Depression], I was in a day coach headed for Hollywood, where you sit up — probably four days and four nights. I had $48 in cash that I had saved up, and two loaves of bread, and two jars of peanut butter and a sack of apples, and I headed for Hollywood. Got off the train downtown, took the streetcar straight to Paramount, and told them at the gate to tell Mr. Zukor I was here.
And I’ve been here ever since.
Ribbit
There is some buzz this week about a company called Ribbit. TechCrunch swallowed whole their marketing line of “Silicon Valley’s First Phone Company” while GigaOm spat it out, as he should have. Their site is slick and the service looks interesting, but they are certainly not Silicon Valley’s first phone company. Ribbit would probably counter that they are the first phone platform, but they’re not that either. Most folks think Asterisk is pretty darn good in that arena.
We built our own VoIP platform for KnowledgeBid simply because we knew exactly what we wanted (trackable calls, authentication, land line phones, no per minute fees). If Ribbit had been around 9 months ago, I’m sure we would have looked at the service, but I think that’s about as far as it would have gone. Ribbit charges for outgoing land line minutes plus a monthly service fee, whereas the KnowledgeBid platform scales and now that we’ve built it, it’s virtually free for us to use. I’m guessing many other VoIP application developers would find themselves in the same camp. Flexibility and options are cool, but if you know what you need, you might as well build it yourself if you’re in it for the long haul.
IRS on Purchasing Fish with Cash
After all these years, I’ve finally figured out how the IRS wants me to account for fish I purchase with cash. It’s right there on page 5 of the instructions for the 2008 form 1099, a form that otherwise governs miscellaneous income and payments to contractors.
Include fees, commissions, prizes and awards for services performed as a nonemployee, other forms of compensation for services performed for your trade or business by an individual who is not your employee, and fish purchases for cash.
I hope this was as helpful for you as it was for me.
*The tax information above has been provided for general guidance only. It is up to you to understand and adhere to the appropriate tax rules. Any tax-related information provided by this site is not intended as and should not be construed as legal, tax, or investment advice. You should always consult your tax advisor to help answer specific questions regarding how tax laws apply to you and/or your business. The tax summary provided is necessarily incomplete, and the tax laws and regulations are subject to change. Therefore, this site does not guarantee and is not liable for the accuracy or completeness of any tax information provided, or any results or outcome as a result of the use of this information. To learn more about U.S. tax requirements, please visit the IRS website. For tax advice or more technical questions about how tax laws apply to you, please consult your tax adviser. Or just don’t by back-alley fish for cash.
Liftopia: Discount lift tickets online
My good friend Evan Reece started the innovative company Liftopia a few years back with his friend and then co-worker Ron Schneidermann. Both previously worked at Hotwire and decided to take the idea of liquid prices and markets to the ski world and create a web-based market for discount lift tickets. Liftopia had 7 resorts on board last year and are heading into this season with 50 resorts signed up…solid growth by any measure. I know skiers across the country will love this service, especially in regions like Northern California, Utah, Colorado, the Pacific Northwest, and the Northeast where weekend skiers have a variety of resorts to choose from. Logic and market theory dictate that fixed prices don’t make any sense in situations like these. Skiers should get cheaper tickets the further out in advance that they buy them (time value of money + risk they incur from not knowing conditions in advance) and resorts should slash prices when conditions are poor and they want to get people to the resort. One challenge the guys are going to face is getting resorts to constantly jigger their prices, although it seems that need for revenue (and maybe even off the shelf pricing algorithms) would take care of this…
Liftopia got some great press in the Boston Globe yesterday.
Gigaom: VoIP on Facebook is flat.
Very interesting article reviewing the weak state of voice apps on Facebook over at GigaOm. Given Facebook’s ~50,000,000 users, these numbers are really, really bad. Analysis included in the article from AppHound:
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