How the Money Contest Failed, Graham and a Great Idea

In the begining of the month I said I would live the whole month in Évora with 250€ (house rent excluded). That has failed miserably. It’s now the 23th and I’ve spend 270€ already.

The main reason for this failure I think was the fact that I didn’t use a separate account to manage the 250€. Lesson number one: Having more money favors more spending. Another lesson, rather obvious, is that by eating at home I save more. Since many times, especially at lunch there isn’t time to cook, eating at the University has become an alternative to other restaurants because it is rather cheap (less than 4€ for a meal).

Drive less, walk more! It’s the best way to save these days. The gas price has gone nuts.

On another note, I read the latest post on Graham’s blog and a quote caught my eye:

>“Here we are. So what is our purpose here? Well, we humans are as conspicuously different from other animals as the anteater. In our case the distinguishing feature is the ability to reason. So obviously that is what we should be doing, and a human who doesn’t is doing a bad job of being human– is no better than an animal.”

I wonder how this contradicts the search for emptyness, normally associated with Zen Budishm.

The guys at Steelpixel had a great idea. They are offering lifetime hosting starting at 150$, one-time fee. Read on because it is worth it:

>VC or not to VC, that is a tricky question. Chris and I made the decision long ago that we would never take VC. We don’t feel it allows you the freedom to run a company the way you think it should be run. If you can’t do that, what is the point of running your own company?

>We have kicked around a few ideas on how to get money to pay for things we need. We talked about borrowing Kevin Burton’s idea and setup adsense and have people use that for us. We decided we wanted to offer something in return for helping us out so we decided to use the same idea TextDrive did. We are offering two lifetime hosting packages to customers, starting now.

>The money we raise will allow us to add more server capacity, increase our support response time (by make this our full time gig), and to focus on ways to improve the entire hosting process for our customers.

The Exorcist

Somehow today I remembered the movie The Exorcist. I later went to the Wikipedia page that covers the film details and guess what, I found an actual 360º virtual view of the steps where Father Damien Karras dies. Creepy. Went to Google Maps and Yahoo Maps but it hasn’t enough detail on that spot to make it interesting.

I rented the DVD Last Days, to watch tonight. Yesterday I watched Wiker Park (2004) with Ana and I thought it was great. I went back to MovieLens today, a movie recomendation site after a few months of absence since I registered. I first heard about it when I went to Brazil and saw a workshop on recomendation systems. The system is rather interesting, it uses simple algorithms like K-Means and correlation, etc.. but I didn’t saw any movie recommended by it so I can’t say if it works or not :-)

Other than that, today I was able to run for 20min in a row, wow, not bad.

PANIC: Circular dependancy

Upgraded to the latest Dapper release of Ubuntu Linux and got this kernel panic:


Begin: Mounting root file system... ...
Begin: Running /scripts/local-top...
PANIC: Circular dependancy. Exiting.
[4294675.656000] Kernel panic - not syncing: Attempted to kill init!

A synatic “Mark all upgrades” and “Apply” fixed the problem.

Ryan Carson: Will your Web App Make Money?

Ryan Carson, one of the developers behind DropSend, a well-known service for sending large files over the Web, in a piece called “Will your Web App Make Money”, talks about how people vastly overestimate the number of paying customers they’ll get when deploying a web app:

> If you’re offering a free plan to your customers (for example DropSend offers a free plan that enables users to send 5 free sends a month before they start paying) then expect to get around 98% or 99% of your customers on that plan. That means that you can only really bank on 1% or 2% of your total customers on the paying plan. In our experience this is true and other major players in the web app industry have agreed. This is about the industry average.

Coming from Ryan Carson this is especially interesting. DropSend currently has 17,000 users gained in just over five months. Their business model is based on subscription plans. Wouldn’t you expect more than 1% of the total customers would use the paying plan?

The article is published at ThinkVitamin, a new resource launched recently for web developers, designers and entrepreneurs, also powered by Ryan. I saw this via PlasticBag and as they say it’s already a pretty interesting looking site with some extremely cool people commenting and supporting the venture.

25 Years Financially Supporting a Slacker Like Me Isn't Easy

One of my laptop wings broke a few days ago. Its the end-of-life for this old Toshiba Satellite Pro 4600 that will turn 6 years next August. Funny that precisely the same thing happened to Cláudio a few months ago, he had the same laptop with nearly the same age (a month older) and the right wing broke. I guess Toshiba had this pretty well figured out, ham?

I’m now inclined to acquire a Macbook Pro or a Thinkpad but this will not happen probably until October or so. Although I have the money to buy it now I also have to think about the next months and I decided I wouldn’t take money from my parents anymore. 25 years financially supporting a slacker like me is already more than enough and not easy. They are in good age to enjoy life, travelling or in any other way they see fit.

Tiago invited me and Ana to a stand-up show by Pedro Tochas, a Portuguese well-known comediant. It will be great, this guy realls rocks. In the mean time, my new ADSL modem has arrived! Me and Ana have upgraded to Clix 16 Mbits, the fastest home-user internet solution available at the moment in Portugal (I think). For my happy surprise, the modem supports Ethernet :) Work has also arrived, this time via e-mail. Have to prepare this week classes.

Google has launched the Google Calendar and they got it right as usual. I don’t want to think what will happen now to those couple of startups that were on the run for a web calendar. Close the doors probably.

Publico newspaper featured a two page article this week about Web 2.0 and “social networking” web sites. Many well-known sites like Flickr, del.icio.us, 43folders, etc.. were featured. Very nice article.