Modern hackers, like Paul Graham, got rich by selling a piece of software for a high price to a customer that was willing to pay big bucks for it, in his case Yahoo!. Was Graham’s Viaweb worth the $49 million? Possibly, possibly not. I don’t know how much of Yahoo!’s success has to do with their acquisition of Viaweb, but during the dot com boom, that piece of software meant more than it would have been before or after that period.
There’s an element of timing that goes with successful startups. Had Graham tried to sell Viaweb in 2018, or somehow in 1910, we would not be reading his compendium of essays. Graham speaks of a handful of qualities necessary for a successful startup, such as hard work, leverage, etc, but he seems to overlook how lucky he really was. He does note that the current age is different – we are living in the post-Industrial revolution age – but he doesn’t consider the timing of his start up.
For modern hackers, a fortune can be made, but only because there are corporations that want to be on the cutting edge of technology, and sometimes, due to the slowness of corporations, they must buy their technology from outsiders before competitors get the upper-hand. This means modern hackers benefit from free lancing if they can make a good product, but it takes more than grit and hard work to make a successful start-up, as Graham leads the reader to believe. Modern hackers must have the soft skills to market their product as useful, either to a customer base or the parent company.
This means for a hacker to be pecuniarly successful today, they must “sell out” and make a product not for love of the tech, but love of success using tech.
As for out society, I do believe it should encourage taking risks. Too much of society is focused on perfection, or close to it, in order to be successful in later iterations in your life. This can be devastating for somebody that does not benefit from the current structure of society and destroy their self-worth. It’s easy to tell somebody that received a bad mark on an exam that their grade does not define them, but when that causes a decrease on their GPA, which many jobs require a higher than average GPAs, it becomes easy to believe that that is simply not true.
This translates to businesses. If somebody opens a sandwich shop and it does not do well, they may think they aren’t cut out for the business world, and it’s likely that they’ve invested quite some time to open that sandwich shop. Perhaps they didn’t find their true niche. Or perhaps the world wasn’t ready for a sandwich shop at the time! Those factors should be considered when assessing self-worth, but is easy to ignore with the today’s society.
Does this mean everybody can make the next big business, it’s just a matter of trying? Absolutely not. There are some people that truly should not take the risk of starting a business. But they can take that risk and possibly learn that they actually enjoy the stability of working for another business and find their worth in that way. If one does not recognize their faults after so many attempts and put themselves in a poor situation financially, then I suppose it’s a tough lesson to learn, but that’s the beauty of self-agency.
The next big thing on the horizon. It’s a little service called blockchain. Actually, artificial intelligence. I read on Forbes that 2019 is the year of the smart home assistant. So maybe it’s actually IoT?
Actually, the next big thing is unknown. In one way, the current big thing is battle royale games, with an incredibly successful and slightly unethical freemium model. But how many people were realistically predicting that 2 years ago? While I can say I do believe the next big thing has to do with the Internet in some capacity, I can’t properly predict what it will be. I do hope that it includes something with artificial intelligence and smart home assistants. Maybe somebody will develop OS 1. But that’s merely a dream.
If history repeats itself, we are about to enter a whole new paradigm of experiencing technology, and I think AR will be the next big thing. However, this incorporates a lot of the above. IoT. Artificial intelligence and deep learning. Seamlessly integrated systems. It’s a technology that has been around for a while, but only recently has it developed into something that people genuinely like to experience, and the barrier to entry is getting relatively cheaper too. But again, maybe I’m just hoping to have OS 1.