
Thursday, August 04, 2005

Robbie Allen, a fellow classmate of mine, had posted links to 2 wonderful essays written by Paul Graham's on entrepreneurship a few weeks. Graham has once again intrigued us with a new thought-provoking essay about Open Source.
The essay covers not about Open Source products like Firefox or Linux
but highlights why the underlying processes and the people in Open
Source are often more successful and less costly than those in some
professional environments. This essay isn't about IT or computer
programming, it actually has a lot of relevance in building successful
creative, innovative enterprises by applying some of the observations
and best practices in the Open Source environment. I find the following
paragraph in the essay most very relevant to my career path that I
currently taking:
Hackers tend to think business is for MBAs. But business
administration is not what you're doing in a startup. What you're doing
is business creation. And the first phase of that is mostly product
creation-- that is, hacking. That's the hard part. It's a lot harder to
create something people love than to take something people love and
figure out how to make money from it.
| 8/4/2005 11:13:13 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00) |
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