1. Viewing All "photo" Posts

  2. I have spent the last few days skiing in Park City with the family.

    Here are some photos from our trip. Most of them were shot on my iPhone 4.

  3. April 06, 2012 at 01:11PM - I was at Park City Mountain Resort Ski Trip!

  4. April 04, 2012 at 08:06PM - I’m at RocketSpace Super Sonic Speaker Series w/ @vkhosla from Khosla Ventures

  5. April 04, 2012 at 11:57AM - I’m at The Creamery

  6. April 03, 2012 at 11:47AM - I’m at Crossroads Café

  7. April 03, 2012 at 12:42AM - I’m at Golden Gate Bridge

  8. April 02, 2012 at 10:33PM - I’m at In-N-Out Burger it’s one of those nights #munchies

  9. April 02, 2012 at 08:20PM - I’m at Crunch Fitness - The Embarcadero

  10. Quora by the numbers.

    Click here for a larger version.

    [via Mashable]

  11. Hey, look what I found!

    Techmeme’s Crunchie for “best bootstrapped startup.” 

  12. Earlier today All Things D reported:

    Andreessen Horowitz has invested more than $80 million in Twitter via purchasing stock in private secondary markets.

    The move is an interesting one, since Andreessen Horowitz was not part of the recent $200 million round of venture funding at the San Francisco microblogging company, led by Kleiner Perkins at a $3.75 billion valuation.

    This evening the Wall Street Journal reported:

    Twitter is holding low-level acquisition talks at an estimated valuation of $8 billion to $10 billion.

    I can’t help but speculate that Andreessen Horowitz knew of Twitter’s ‘low-level’ acquisition talks prior to the Wall Street Journal making them public. It’s an interesting coincidence that sheds some light on the potential for information asymmetry to exist in private secondary markets.

  13. As is the case with any nonprofit, there is a membership fee associated with joining the W3 Consortium. (link: W3C Fee Table)

    The W3 Consortium charges small startups a $7,900 annual fee while larger startups must forfeit $68,500 per year. This is an example of a discriminatory pricing scheme.

    From Investopedia:

    What Does Price Discrimination Mean?
    Price Discrimination is a pricing strategy that charges customers different prices for the same product or service. Price discrimination allows a company to earn higher profits than standard pricing because it allows firms to capture every last dollar of revenue available from each of its customers.

    Google, Apple and Microsoft might have to pay $68,500 per year to join, but you and I only have to pay a fairly affordable $7,900 per year.