-
Website
http://avc.com/ -
Original page
http://www.avc.com/a_vc/2009/11/the-avc-reader-census.html -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
ShanaC
1217 comments · 71 points
-
daryn
213 comments · 14 points
-
kidmercury
827 comments · 103 points
-
howardlindzon
207 comments · 71 points
-
Charlie Crystle
203 comments · 35 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Getting Computer Science Into Middle School
1 day ago · 254 comments
-
End of Year Music Posts
11 hours ago · 36 comments
-
How To Get Me To Hang Up On You
3 days ago · 158 comments
-
Open APIs and Open Standards
4 days ago · 207 comments
-
Trading Deals, A Lost Art?
2 days ago · 78 comments
-
Getting Computer Science Into Middle School
Now if you'll excuse me, it's Saturday. That means I'm going to put my wife, my 2 kids and my dog into one of our two SUV's drive from our suburban home to our rural home, where we will immediately begin grilling extraordinarily fresh chunks of beef, consuming bourbon and firing semi-automatic assault rifles at pumpkins down-range while discussing our forthcoming enslavement by the statist elites.
That, or I'll plan world domination via my next startup all day and cap it off with bourbon and bar-food with the greatest mix of hippies and fascist entrepreneurs in the South.
oh that comment was so much better than the survey. But without the survey would never have seen the light of day.
Hey, it's Saturday --- how about the football? You gotta have some culture!
* Wear makeup everyday
* Prefer dramatic novels
* Know 4 or more languages
* Female
It's a boyzone 'round here!
And if I thought about it, I like reading dramatic novels when I am not reading non-fiction. Not highly dramatic, but like Haruki Murkami dramatic. I've mentioned in the past that I really admired Fred's wife. It's really logical, because occasionally when I stop by I see that I cook similar food, hsave read or will read similar book, and tend to like her taste in shopping (though if I had to hedge, I probably would veer a little more towards his daughters, who I don't read...but I'm 23 and that's sort of logical)
I'm female baby.
don't taste good to my brain. Sci-Fi is pure candy.
One caveat: 95% of SciFi is horrible... simply unreadable. The last 5% of
SciFi is so good it completely makes up for the other 95% and makes it my
favorite genre.
non-fiction, with the same ratio (more like 99/1 for business but that's a
topic for another day).
Sounds fun
I do hear everyone rave about Snow Crash and Neil Stephenson's other books, and I did enjoy Neuromancer in high school, so maybe I need to give it another chance. What are the first 3 sci-fi books I should read?
google thread between @bfeld and a bunch of his followers about the 3
best sci fi books (which he coined the holy trinity). Cant find it so
ill paraphrase. Snow crash and neuromancer were automatic, but there
was much debate over the third... Some said Dune, others were any Dick
(so prolific that they can't choose), any Arthur c Clark (similar
problem). If you can find the thread, there are great ideas there.
Any way, start with snow crash.
Andrew
thread.
Yes, I maintain a weird reading list for someone who makes facebook profiles....
While Warren Buffett's feet were made of the same clay as everyone else in the recent downturn, his annual letters to shareholders are some pretty damn good reading. And while he does not live in a BIG house, his wallet does.
Why do all those know it all economists live in such ratty houses? LOL
on sci-fi right now.
Also Flash Forward is airing now (and on Hulu), which I think is a pretty good sci-fi/mystery show.
Female
Prefer mystery novels (this was tough - I actually read everything I can get my hands on)
Shop at high-end retailers
Wear cologne/perfume daily.
A fantastic tool - have been reviewing the data and thinking of all the different ways to apply to my client's marketing initiatives - this could add another layer of depth over our typical target analysis - love it.
i bet chris dixon will be by here at one point today and will read this
Of course, that's one helluva different problem. I believe it's worth working on.
"Don't judge me!.....but here's what I think and do all day!"
Next up is swapping the ads there out for real time search. It's an opt in setup, and should be completely transparent (we'll be working in some less than transparent pattern matching though). Why should Google & Facebook have all the fun with data.
You can find others conversing about the same topics as you are in real time. It's a form of structure to real time conversations. Maybe check out their profile tags to see what they talk about.
although i participated in the AVC reader hunch poll as a "peer pressure" type of thing -- everyone else in the community was doing it, fred the resident blog star said it was cool, so i got curious and wanted to see how i stacked up. i made it through the first 25 questions, although i feel like if you are going to ask me 25 questions, i should get some type of reward at the end. now i just feel like an outcast for being a vegetarian :)
If I'm allowed to eat a steak once a quarter
although i should note i eat seafood every few months, which some of my hardcore vegetarian friends diss me for and say wipes away all my vegetarian street cred. damn.
* European
* Politically conservative
* Shop at high-end retailers
* Wear cologne/perfume daily"
Not shocked about the first two (only 8% conservatives here!), but the latter two are a bit surprising.
me most uncommon answers were:
Asian (Israel is in Asia?)
PC person (hell yeah!)
Moderate travellers (where do you people travel all the time?)
* Vegetarian
* European
* Drive a sedan
* Shop at discount/mass merchants
It is strange, but it was fun.
Also the disqus login UI wasn't visible on iPhone. It's an iPhone world and you have a nice Css for it, but some of the content and tools break down.
I didn't see a question asking about sulferless wines, but I if I had a question in that area I would come to you. I no longer drink, but the survey didn't ask why?
Funny comment on the wines. I see you are being subjected to my constant stream of wine tasting notes on my blog and my new interest in the 'Living Wine' movement.
Personal behaviorial psychology, I never would have suspected I had such a strong interest in this topic. Not only does it relate strongly to building something of value, but is bound to what drives us. That motive force is critical to creation.
'The motive force is critical to creation', hmm, I will see what meaning I can tease out of this poetry. And I mean this as a serious compliment!
Other than meeting and spending quality time with lots of interesting people (every Presidential candidate for the last two cycles, etc.), going to lots and lots of parties, supporting lots of very worthy charities in their gala fundraisers, the introduction to wine and learning from people who really knew what they were talking about was almost worth the small fortune I lost in tuition. It was their expertise that made it such a memorable experience.
The wine tastings --- oh, the wine tastings!
You could almost track the globalization of the world's economy by the next country whose wines became drinkable!
Is there any great country that does not have great wine?
I'm not biting on this one as there is no non-contentious retort. Certainly it is easier to argue the 'greatness' of the 'gewurztraminer' varietal' than it is to argue the 'greatness' of countries. I love London and the UK but hey, I've never recommended a wine from there. Is there one;)
Nuff said
Ryan Graves
414.559.3924
Twitter: @ryangraves
http://thedreaminaction.com
and for a rough financial situation (technically that is true, I have stafford loans, because I am a undergraduate student)
The only other thing it called me out is for being moderately well graced at understanding technology. I answered it that way because It is a poorly worded question. There are definitely people here, and where I am, who understand it better. I definitely know certain things better than others. And there are definitely others who know much less (into the field of know nothing)
A) am I comparing myself to someone
B)what kind of tech are we talking about here- is it the fact that my before my cellphone broke (damn you improprer soldering), I couldn't figure out what the wordpress plugin didn't work, but I could figure out what things needed to be checked? Is it that I wrote my first javascript thingy- where does that count in a scalar system?
In the end this question just irritated me. Has to be said.
8% Female (n=49)
Fred, you need an affirmative action plan at this point.
Um, I guess what you do is pick a mommy-blog topic and then tweet it.
or -- just a thought! -- you don't tell one of your tiny percentage of female readers that you don't understand why they stop by here at all if they don't believe you lol.
I didn't call you a liar.
I said *I didn't believe what you were saying*.
and I don't. Throwing a fit and telling me you're pissed doesn't persuade me any further.
I need investigative journalism on your surprising claims that people who give everything away make a living. It really is an untested theory, realized by only a tiny handful of people who happen to make their living on the lecture circuit (Doctorow, Andersen) and I'd like to see how much truth there is for everybody else, even in this subset of people who are rock stars able to sign to a label.
It's very important to prove your claims by journalism, not by propaganda, and back them up by reason, not by telling people you are pissed.
It kind of cuts to what I say all the time.. sure things like Twitter and Facebook (which interestingly I see facebook much more the women's medium and twitter mens' ..surely for the long form and short form versions of their communication)... but the question you should see coming out of those men and women numbers in your survey is ...facebook and twitter's success' were created in a higher educated, specific male dominated culture... how much more successful would they have been had they taken in information, ideas and views that were not "inside baseball" created. I think your blog numbers show that perhaps the "math of success" might be more successful if the technology and investments weren't so overwhlemingly tunnel visioned on the inside baseball crowd...
Twitter facebook other technologies all created by a population as culturally diverse as it seems is limited by it's ladder and power structures...along with it's social hierarchy.
imho
It's returning big fat zeros though; did you have to do anything other than add the widget code?
thx!