Dec 6
Feeling that holiday spirit of giving? Not sure who to help? Well, look no further. We're highlighting 10 worthy, national charities and encouraging everyone to give what they can. Welcome to the first installment blog of our 10-part Charity Series. Here at BobVila.com we deal with all things home-related. Amidst the chaos surrounding foreclosures, underwater mortgages and contaminated drywall it's easy to forget the millions of those who don't have a home at all. It seems ...

Tagi: national alliance to end homelessness, charity series, holiday spirit, millis, drywall, charities, foreclosures, chaos, mortgages, blog

Dec 17
ripdev-smile.png

We are excited to announce that most of our products (namely Kate, Russian Project, i2Reader, Greek Project, Hood and iPref) are now available in our APT repository for Cydia/Icy. Give 'em a try if you didn't yet. :)

Also, to celebrate the mark of 200,000 sold copies of our software, we are permanently dropping down the prices on selected products:

  • Kate is now being offered in 6 month subscription and Unlimited variants:
    • 6 months subscription: $20 → $10
    • Unlimited edition: $45 → $25
  • Russian Project: $21 → $15
  • i2Reader Pro: $35 → $25
We are already working on Kate for 3.0, and i2Reader went through some major rewrites to soon shine with more formats support as well as an improved FB2 parser.

We believe this marks the beginning of the new era for Ripdev as a team. Over the past year we have grown from 4 to 15 people, and are successfully developing our own solutions as well as doing some offshore development. Our software protection system Kali AP still holds the ranks of the most advanced anti-piracy solution on the market, and our free products Installer and Icy serve millions of people around the world.

This all, of course, couldn't happen without your support... so we'd like to take an opportunity and say "thank you" to everyone who supported us on the way. You rock.

-Alexander (x4), Alexey, Andrey, Anton, Cyril, Ilya, Julia, Milana, Slava, Victoria, Yuriy (x2)

Tagi: russian project, solutis, fb2, milana, millis, offshore development, mths, alexey, slava, andrey, mth, x4, cyril, ilya, new era, anti piracy, repository, peoe, alexander, victoria

Feb 9

How much is a good idea worth? According to Derek Sivers, not much:

It's so funny when I hear people being so protective of ideas. (People who want me to sign an NDA to tell me the simplest idea.) To me, ideas are worth nothing unless executed. They are just a multiplier. Execution is worth millions.

To make a business, you need to multiply the two. The most brilliant idea, with no execution, is worth $20. The most brilliant idea takes great execution to be worth $20,000,000. That's why I don't want to hear people's ideas. I'm not interested until I see their execution.

I was reminded of Mr. Sivers article when this email made the rounds earlier this month:

I feel that this story is important to tell you because Kickstarter.com copied us. I tried for 4 years to get people to take Fundable seriously, traveling across the country, even giving a presentation to FBFund, Facebook's fund to stimulate development of new apps. It was a series of rejections for 4 years. I really felt that I presented myself professionally in every business situation and I dressed appropriately and practiced my presentations. That was not enough. The idiots wanted us to show them charts with massive profits and widespread public acceptance so that they didn't have to take any risks.

All it took was 5 super-connected people at Kickstarter (especially Andy Baio) to take a concept we worked hard to refine, tweak it with Amazon Payments, and then take credit. You could say that that's capitalism, but I still think you should acknowledge people that you take inspiration from. I do. I owe the concept of Fundable to many things, including living in cooperative student housing and studying Political Science at Michigan. Rational choice theory, tragedy of the commons, and collective action are a few political science concepts that are relevant to Fundable.

Yes, Fundable had some technical and customer service problems. That's because we had no money to revise it. I had plans to scrap the entire CMS and start from scratch with a new design. We were just so burned out that motivation was hard to come by. What was the point if we weren't making enough money to live on after 4 years?

The disconnect between idea and execution here is so vast it's hard to understand why the author himself can't see it.

I wouldn't call ideas worthless, per se, but it's clear that ideas alone are a hollow sort of currency. Success is rarely determined by the quality of your ideas. But it is frequently determined by the quality of your execution. So instead of worrying about whether the Next Big Idea you're all working on is sufficiently brilliant, worry about how well you're executing.

The criticism that all you need is "super-connected people" to be successful was also leveled at Stack Overflow. In an email to me last year, Andy Baio -- ironically, the very person being cited in the email -- said:

I very much enjoyed the Hacker News conversation about cloning the site in a weekend. My favorite comments were from the people that believe Stack Overflow is only successful because of the Cult of Atwood & Spolsky. Amazing.

I don't care how internet famous you are; nobody gets a pass on execution. Sure, you may have a few more eyeballs at the beginning, but if you don't build something useful, the world will eventually just shrug its collective shoulders and move along to more useful things.

One of my all time favorite software quotes is from Wil Shipley:

This is all your app is: a collection of tiny details.

In software development, execution is staying on top of all the tiny details that make up your app. If you're not constantly obsessing over every aspect of your application, relentlessly polishing and improving every little part of it -- no matter how trivial -- you're not executing. At least, not well.

And unless you work alone, which is a rarity these days, your ability to stay on top of the collection of tiny details that makes up your app will hinge entirely on whether or not you can build a great team. They are the building block of any successful endeavor. This talk by Ed Catmull is almost exclusively focused on how Pixar learned, through trial and error, to build teams that can execute.

Ed Catmull talk at Stanford

It's a fascinating talk, full of some great insights, and you should watch the whole thing. In it, Mr. Catmull amplifies Mr. Sivers' sentiment:

If you give a good idea to a mediocre group, they'll screw it up. If you give a mediocre idea to a good group, they'll fix it. Or they'll throw it away and come up with something else.

Execution isn't merely a multiplier. It's far more powerful. How your team executes has the power to transform your idea from gold into lead, or from lead into gold. That's why, when building Stack Overflow, I was so fortunate to not only work with Joel Spolsky, but also to cherry-pick two of the best developers I had ever worked with in my previous jobs and drag them along with me. Kicking and screaming if necessary.

If I had to point to the one thing that made our project successful, it was not the idea behind it, our internet fame, the tools we chose, or the funding we had (precious little, for the record).

It was our team.

The value of my advice is debatable. But you would do well to heed the advice of Mr. Sivers and Mr. Catmull. If you want to be successful, stop worrying about the great ideas, and concentrate on cultivating great teams.

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Tagi: derek sivers, cooperative student, customer service problems, massive profits, fundable, choice theory, public acceptance, brilliant idea, millis, rks, acti, mey, student housing, political science, nda, many things, apps, scratch, cms, peoe

Sep 2
Today’s post is from Rob Jones, chief blogger, social media guy and online marketer with BuildDirect, an online building materials and flooring supplier. Hardwood flooring is a reliable, great-looking and very long-lasting floor option. Millions of homeowners and companies invest in hardwood floor installations every year with great satisfaction and long-term success for all of [...]

Tagi: line marketer, hardwood flooring, wood flooring, creative alternatives, millis, hardwood floor, term success, building materials

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