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while i don't disagree, i would like to point this out:

a lot of hackers are on the bottom floor. they enjoy what they do, but they have to do SOMEthing for money to pay the bills.

i, personally, would enjoy flipping a company if i had the opportunity, because this would allow me a huge latitude with what i would be able to pursue in the future. it would give me the ability to build a sustainable company with future ventures without having to make concessions/sacrifices in the name of being able to buy food next month.

i don't think most hackers are on the verge of running out of ideas, either.



On the bottom floor? You must be kidding me. Average salaries of CS graduate after 3-4 years out of school are in six-figure range in most parts of the country. That's in top 5% of US population and you can hardly call that a "bottom floor": ask your mechanical or civil engineering friends how do they feel about such "bottom floor".

My younger brother was kind of pissed with his $80K offer from Microsoft immediately after graduation claiming that some of his friends did better. That's ridiculous.

Stop kidding yourself, huge percentage "Web 2.0 entrepreneurs" just aren't interested in building real value-providing businesses. Startups like Twitter aren't built to be companies, they're built to flip - it's included in their "business model". I can't speak for more well-known startups, but those I am personally familiar with are all built on the premise of M&A nearly immediately after starting to break even.

THAT is the primary reason why there aren't too many "next Googles". Not many people are ambitious enough to aim than high.

It is kind of sad that Paul rarely participates in discussions like this one, but understandable given his limited time, but I'd love to hear his opinion on this.


i think you're the one kidding yourself. by "most of the country" do you mean seattle, NYC, and california? i work in a middle-america capital city and i make half what you're quoting as a software engineer with 3-4 years experience and i'm in a leadership position. in addition, i'm working at the best paying employer in the city in which i work.

also, working full time on a startup means that you're going to not be making top dollar for your local market. if my time is devoted to being a full time hacker, i'm not going to have the stability of a regular paycheck or benefits. money will be an issue.

sure, there are tons of startups that are gearing themselves to flip. but you're seeing a lot of them because the ones trying to be flipped are all in-your-face. they have to be extremely well-known in order to be flippable. there are tons of sustainable stealth startups that are just not that well-known because their business model is different.


No, if you're an entrepreneur in Seattle/NYC/CA you're not going to be making top dollar for your market (at first). You're lucky to live somewhere cheap, take advantage. It's a lot easier to make $40k in your first year than it is to make $120k.


"Average salaries of CS graduate after 3-4 years out of school are in six-figure range in most parts of the country. "

What have you been smoking, I want some. Seriously, you're way out of touch if you think that's average salary in most parts of the Country.


You need to see different parts of the country. Where I live, programming jobs are $30-40k or a 2+ hour commute. People with 6+ years of experience are taking these jobs and the entry-level guys are relocating or selling fast food.


Must be a location thing. I'm in NJ and I hear a lot of the graduating seniors getting offers in the 50-60 range aound here. 80 is a great offer. And most of these guys consider a bittorrent client in java to be big and scary, so someone who actually knows what theyre doing could probably do a lot better..if you're willing to write back-end shit for goldman or merrill or whatever.


By "most of the country" I mostly meant two coasts: Seattle, Oregon (Portland), California, Boston/NY/DC. Plus some other technology hubs: central Texas (Austin) and Chicago. That is not a small list of cities, certainly deserves to be called "most of the US", weighted by population.


You're an evil person for throwing out a challenge like that to a map/demography nerd :). A little trip to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_metropoli... and a little spreadsheet gives 75 million if you only count LA/SF/San Diego in CA, or 85 million if you count all of CA. That's 25-30% of the US population, hardly most.

Now if you were to count GDP of those metro's, I'm guessing you'd be around 50% or more of the country.




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