Bootstrapping Start-ups 285
An anonymous reader writes "How many of us wanted to follow
our dream and start our own start-up? How many of us thought that it can't be done due to costs, the need of big bucks and convincing some snotty VC? Well it didn't stop these guys. The most current success story is
social networking software Huminity which
has been on /.
before. The recipe for their success was: open source, clustering $100/mo
servers, using the web to find native translators instead of using over priced
local ones and hiring GUI designers from popular skins download sites."
Shame they didn't have someone design their site (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Shame they didn't have someone design their sit (Score:2)
Re:Shame they didn't have someone design their sit (Score:2)
The recipe for their success was: open source, clustering $100/mo servers, using the web to find native translators instead of using over priced local ones and hiring GUI designers from popular skins download sites.
With all the money they saved maybe they should hire somebody to do these things.
And for the love of god, make your page have scroll bars! I'm in Galeon, and the only way I could scroll through the mirrors was by click-dragging my mouse to highlight things. Very annoying.
maybe they did (Score:2)
Aren't flashy skins good UI???
Only problem... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Only problem... (Score:5, Funny)
Does anyone have a good suggestion for raising capital without forfeiting the rights to one's intellectual property?
I believe the typical strategy is to run up your credit cards, mortgage your house, and borrow from relatives.
Re:Only problem... (Score:2, Insightful)
If you're worried about a larger entity, one with resources, taking your idea and running with it, remember that size often ha
Re:Only problem... (Score:5, Interesting)
-Restil
How it works (Score:5, Insightful)
Every single work day, dedicate 9:30 - 11:30 AM to nothing but cold calls [ok, I hear your moaning...] Or have your S.O. do it -- if s/he has a less threatening voice.
Google "cold calling" and learn the best techniques, on-line -- they do work. Do calls every day! Fill out a spreadsheet with who you're going to call the next day and, just like successful aerobics, get up in the morning and do it without thinking about it. Use a similar spreadsheet to track who you've called and call again the next month. And the month after that.
Eventually, you'll turn those calls into appointments, you'll turn the appointments into sales, and you'll turn the sales into (life-long?) clients. Eventually you'll be paying all your bills, on time. Eventually you'll be paying down your debt and even saving a little for retirement. Eventually, you'll be eating out in style, again. Eventually, you will not need to do any cold calling!
We do about 20 calls a day, and a day doesn't go by that I don't get at least one appointment. Sometimes it's someone who's rather friendly or curious. So I go the next day and introduce myself in person and ask a slew of questions about their business. I don't tell them anything about mine unless they ask -- then I keep it to just one sentence worth of info. and get back to them.
After about 4-6 "appointments", I make a sale. If I do a great job the first time, the first sale can lead to many, many more. A client tends to return to the one person s/he knows. They rarely let another geek into their sphere, unless there's a good reason.
I also think it's good to "spread the wealth". So for other geeks I trust with my clients, I throw work their way as much as possible. Clients like to know there's a "hit-by-truck" backup for your services.
Remember how hard your first real job was in IT? Took you a while to get to real "success", right? This is no difference, except you're having to sell to several "bosses" instead of just one [cheap, lying, no-good, rotten, four-flushing, low-life, snake-licking, dirt-eating, inbred, overstuffed, ignorant, blood-sucking, dog-kissing, brainless, dickless, hopeless, heartless, fat-assed, bug-eyed, stiff-legged, spineless, worm-headed sack of monkey shit] Holy shit! Where's the Tylenol...
It's funny because it's true (Score:3, Interesting)
I recently took a new products development class as part of my MS Management of Technology degree (shameless plug: UNH MS MOT [uvm.edu]) and what the above poster described is mostly true. Other sources of funding include:
Government grants (Matt-Lesko-style)
Government small business loans (these are largely the reason for Subway's growth since franchisee's typically take one out to open a Subway.)
Your Rich Uncle
An angel investor. An angel investor typically will invest in early-stage companies to help them g
Re:Only problem... (Score:3, Funny)
Loan
Job
Lotto
VC is just a loan that you pay back with stock/IP. If its a good idea, you'll make so much that you won't mind giving a chunk (and maybe a large chunk) to someone else.
I'm heavily invested in Lotto myself.
Re:Only problem... (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, equity financing is very different from loans. Basically, with loans if your business fails you still owe the money. With equity financing if your business fails you don't owe anything.
I'm not a big fan of debt. Equity financing, however, is an excellent way of doing things.
Slashdot tautology #101 (Score:2, Insightful)
While the above aphorism may be true. Think if you apply the same reasoning in an evolutionary framework. If you don't take a chance, you don't survive.
The question is whether you can make that $1 do more for you than give you a 1 in 65,000,000 chance at retiring early.
Teela Brown has to come from somewhere.
Re:Only problem... (Score:2, Funny)
1. Get several million dollars for capital.
2. Deposit in savings accounts.
3. Wait for interest to accumulate.
4. Return initial millions.
5. Profit!
Easy as pie, and 100% guaranteed to turn a profit each and every time. Any investors?
Re:Only problem... (Score:2)
Re:Only problem... (Score:2)
Drugs! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Drugs! (Score:5, Funny)
Most mid-level pot/coke dealers aren't nearly as tough as they seem, they aren't going to go more than 500 miles out of their way to recoup under $5,000.
I can't help but think that there's really only one way to learn this sort of thing...
Re:Drugs! (Score:2, Funny)
Actually, we're tougher than you think, and thanks to your posting (and kind listing of where you live and who you work for), we know exactly where to find you.
See you soon, dumbass.
P.S. Some dude "99" contacted me. He wants to tag along and have a few words with you.
Yes (Re:Only problem... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Yes (Re:Only problem... (Score:3, Insightful)
Everybody thinks they need a million dollars to start, but in reality you can probably get started for a few hundred or a few thousand.
It really depends on your idea. Some ideas can be implemented for $0. Others might take thousands, others will take tens or hundreds of thousands. Some ideas could take billions or trillions. They all might be ultimately profitable, but some have high startup costs, and some don't. It depends on the nature of the idea.
Re:Yes (Re:Only problem... (Score:5, Insightful)
I've long held the theory that although everybody (well, every geek) wants to run a startup, most of us are either too scared or lazy to do it and just in incredible denial. So while planning our startup we are on the lookout for the first insurmountable obstacle that we can point to and say "Woop, oh well, guess this can't happen." The easiest has always been "I need more money than I have", followed rapidly by things like "I need more time" and "I'll probably get crushed by the big players if I even attempt it."
Geeks are incredible realists, which often means incredible cynics. If we can predict a gray area in the future of our plans, a spot where things might not work out, it is very difficult to ignore it. That is why it is often a good idea to team with a real business-minded entrepreneur who just plain does not think that way. They make a great pair. Engineer says why something will break, entrepreneur says why it does not matter.
I have a good friend who is definitely more salesman than geek. I told him an idea. His response was, "I know right now who I could sell that to, if you can make it." But to me, the idea of "Will this sell?" was one of those gray areas that could easily be insurmountable -- assume it will not, therefore halt. But other personalities do not see it that way.
Re:Yes (Re:Only problem... (Score:2)
Not that ending up nowhere is necessarily bad, but it's definitely a downer after a lot of hard work.
Re:Yes (Re:Only problem... (Score:2)
Re:Yes (Re:Only problem... (Score:3, Informative)
Possibly true, but not useful thinking, because that causes everybody to assume that their idea will take a million dollars.
Anyone that stupid will soon be departed from their money anyhow. This thinking comes from the fact that a million dollars is pretty much the minimum you need to make a decent return without doing any real work.
I've long held the theory that although everybody (well, every geek) wants to run a startup, most of us are either too scared or lazy to do it and just in incredible denia
Re:Yes (Re:Only problem... (Score:3, Insightful)
The interesting thing to me is that although we're talking "startup", how many people in the convers
Re:Yes (Re:Only problem... (Score:2)
Starting up means going inexpensive. There will come a time when people will judge the quality of your product by how snazzy your business card is. But those are not the people that will help get your business off the ground. Those folks are better off getting the basic business card. Odds are that they're more likely to appreci
Re:Only problem... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd say don't get greedy. Yes, bringing investors on board requires giving up control. But with that money generally comes a wealth of business management experience that you may be lacking.
If your idea is good enough to get the right investors interested, then I guarantee you can go a lot fart
Patents! (Score:2)
And now... (Score:5, Funny)
i have a startup (Score:4, Funny)
Only the arms dealer prospers. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:i have a startup (Score:2)
Contact the companys that make the annoying popups (no not those popups...ew). They must need someone to increase their hit count so they can sell.
From the article: (Score:4, Funny)
Sure, if by angels you mean idiots.
What's the deal? (Score:5, Insightful)
What is their business model? Selling people t-shirts while they use the software for free?
I'm one guy. I also sell t-shirts and give away software. I'm a startup too!
Re:What's the deal? (Score:4, Interesting)
The software actually looks kinda cool, but I'll be damned if another person/company/weasel takes me in and switches to a fee based product midstream. It's sad that I've seen enough of this happen to smell it coming now.
Re:What's the deal? (Score:2)
Re:What's the deal? (Score:2, Informative)
The rest of the license agreement is somewhat hard to read, due to a lack of headings and an abundance of lawyer-speak.
I'm not sure that their business model makes much sense though - I expect that at this stage of the game it will be too hard to grab a good share of the IM market, especially with only the one distinguishing feature, and no message encryption
100/mo on servers (Score:4, Funny)
Fedbiz (Score:5, Insightful)
I now understand the $700 toilet seat:
* $5.95 for materials
* $694.05 for overhead
Completely justified IMHO
Re:Fedbiz (Score:3, Informative)
I do remember being hired for the Army to code a website, and no seeing a paycheck for 4 months. Not only did I have to get through that Army's red tape, I had to go through the University's who had subcontracted the job out to me's red-tape.
Now one advantage I have running a business on the side is the ability to exploit the uber-long lead time on projects. I had a coffee shop that took 4 months to figure out what they wanted, and a professional organi
The $700.00 toilet seat... (Score:4, Informative)
Not saying governments don't waste our money, but this one just plain is misrepresented.
Re:The $700.00 toilet seat... (Score:2, Informative)
Yes, it does:
http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/1298/120798t1.htm [govexec.com]
Re:The $700.00 toilet seat... (Score:2)
http://www.dajosales.com/titham14ozwo.html [dajosales.com]
REAL waste (Score:2)
Re:REAL waste (Score:2)
Re:Fedbiz (Score:3, Insightful)
And there are plenty of small businesses and startups that make their living contracting for the gov't. You just have to know how long it takes to get paid.
successful low cost startup (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:successful low cost startup (Score:2)
What about dumpster diving for startups? (Score:5, Interesting)
There's always the story of Wallflower [wallflower-systems.com], a company that makes digital picture frames. They got their start by buying ancient laptops [alwayson-network.com] (considered scrap) and re-shaping them.
Sometimes, you can start a business with nothing but a little cleverness, and an order from the scrapyard.
Other bootstrapping tips... (Score:5, Insightful)
On the negative side... In a country such a Canada where you can claim R&D tax credits, you can only claim these credits on real expenses - so if you pay yourself (next to) nothing, you won't be able to claim any of that as a tax credit...
Re:Other bootstrapping tips... (Score:2)
Correct me if I'm wr
Re:Other bootstrapping tips... (Score:2, Informative)
"Sweat equity" does not count as an expense and is not claimable... They need to see money actually moving from one account to another... BUT don't take my word for it :) Trust what I say with as much as you paid for it :)
Re:Other bootstrapping tips... (Score:2)
Re:Other bootstrapping tips... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm currently in an incubator - i.e. sharing space with about a dozen other small 'trying like hell' companies. It costs too much, but we and the other companies in there regularly get together to land contracts that any one of us individually couldn't get.
It's not just incubators that get this. I saw a similar effect when working in some serviced offices. Get to know the people around you, become known as a man that can, work will arrive all of it's own accord and suddenly the rent starts to look like a bit of a bargain.
Dave
Re:Other bootstrapping tips... (Score:2)
What a codemonkey needs with a storefront I don't know. I've just always wanted one.
Re:Other bootstrapping tips... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Other bootstrapping tips... (Score:2)
Re:Other bootstrapping tips... (Score:3, Insightful)
The rest of your post was fine, but this is completely wrong. Business cards are dirt cheap to print at Kinko's or somewhere. What are you going to do when you meet potential clients/customers? Are you going to ask if they have a pen to write down your website or phone number? No, well, not if you want their business at least.
Business cards are a great way to make contacts because it contains all of your importan
German Translation... (Score:4, Interesting)
Ok ok, it's not _that_ bad, but I guess it's been translated by either a non-native or a native with quite small technical understanding (translation of specific IT terms sound a bit funny...).
Re:German Translation... (Score:2)
Grandma please! (Score:4, Insightful)
Too bad they didn't hire any actual user interface designers [or at least a graphic designer for their website or even someone who could figure out that it doesn't draw scrollbars in Mozilla]. The 'skin' scene is nice if all you want is eye candy and shiny objects but little else. And looking at their software it doesn't even look like they listened to those desingers much.
User interface design for software is not a paintjob or some quick usability fixes while you're in beta, it's a part of product development.
You only need loads of cash if... (Score:5, Interesting)
There's always the hours after your 9-to-5 (assuming it's a 9-to-5), and they are yours to spend as you wish. If you want to risk your time (and maybe a few of your buddies' time) on a venture that may or may not generate any income, the risk/benefit is pretty well in your favor.
Yes, it is hard to be disciplined enough to find the time when you go home, or to treat it like a real project rather than a hobby, but these are matters of self control, and usually within a person's own determination.
The moment you ask someone else to fund your venture, you are turning over some part of what determines success or failure to someone else.
Check your contract (Score:3, Informative)
Some will even claim that any intellectual property created as a result of you working outside of work hours will be owned by them.
Many people have been screwed by this in the past.
Re:Check your contract (Score:2)
These companies then go on to lose these people because they try to force them into servitude instead of allowing them to help build the business.
The servitude policies are almost always enthusiastically endorsed by middle management.
Re:Check your contract (Score:2)
I make it clear that work done on an employer's dime and equipment is theirs. Work done on MY time and equipment is mine. Everyone should do the same.
Re:You only need loads of cash if... (Score:2)
I also found that knowing that I was screwed if I didn't start making some money helped a great deal. Starvation is the ultimate motivator. As long as I still had a paycheck coming in, I didn't push myself as hard as I was forced to after quiting my jo
Start Small (Score:5, Insightful)
Remember, Hewett Packard and Apple were started out of a borrowed garage.
I am currently running a web developement firm and an ISP from my basement. It's not enough to quit my day job, but it does help line the pockets around the holidays. My market is small non-profits and family run businesses who are sick of dealing with large ISP's, and getting raped by web designers. My product is reliable service for a good price, and the ability to tweak the system to make it do what THEY want it to do.
Re:Start Small (Score:2)
The trick is to marry a good saleswoman. Especially one that does computer tutoring for upper-class seniors.
As far as independent T1 lines, they are only as "independent" as your service provider. My customer's understand part of the reason WHY we are so cheap is because the service is run
another reason to bootstrap.. (Score:4, Interesting)
If you do it the VC way, they will force some people on your board, heck they will force you to _have_ a board. They call it "adult supervision". There is alot of flexibilty you are going to have to give up.
I went through all circles of VC hell and finally decided to go slowly and by myself.
your in luck a /. reader is doing it! (Score:2)
Current status
Business plan is currently bering prepared for VC review in March to July 2004 time frame..I foudn a Buziness plan contest that allows me to get the review by VCs..
First product release beg jabn 2004..
and yes I contribute to opensource!
Re:your in luck a /. reader is doing it! (Score:2)
Re:your in luck a /. reader is doing it! (Score:3, Insightful)
paperwork for a LLC... why? there is no law that says you have to incorperate. be a business owner.
Business plan? good idea... VC review? why? who in their right mind would want any VC scumbags near their dream? VC's are not interested in building a long-term anything.... they want a return ASAP.
go slow, unless you are building a product that requires that you sell X units a day to survive, or X number of subscriptions... (Then your business model is horribly flawed.)
I'
Re:your in luck a /. reader is doing it! (Score:2)
Re:your in luck a /. reader is doing it! (Score:2)
VC? That's the exact opposite of bootstrapping.
But of course, based on your lack of reading/writing skills, maybe it takes you several months to sign a form and send it in...
Re:your in luck a /. reader is doing it! (Score:2)
Pers
Working on it (Score:5, Interesting)
Since we have no money to play with, we find advertising to be the most difficult aspect of starting a business. We do the cheapest things imaginable, and quite often simply ask for established sites to support us, flat out. Google adwords helps also, especially since our keywords are cheap. For payment processing, we use paypal because we cannot afford the setup and gateway fees of a proper service.
The site design and hosting was actually the cheapest part, as he is a graphic designer and I sling code and already have adequate hosting for our service. Hehe, I would post a link but no way can I survive a slashdotting, even a mild one. We have just enough to get by on.
Anyway, we are not making a lot of money, but we started with almost nothing and are ( however pathetic ) profitable and growing rapidly. You just have to be creative, have a service people want, and be willing to beg for eyeballs sometimes. Good luck to anyone who is trying it. With a bit more money than we have to work with, you might do quite well. You will certainly get there faster than we are.
local talent too expensive? (Score:5, Insightful)
Where have we heard that before. Are we now advocating shipping jobs offshore as long as it saves a lot of money and does not affect quality? Or is it that these jobs were not IT positions, so no one cares.
Anyway, the whole post sounds like an advertisement. Hope /. got comensated.
Translation ? (Score:3, Informative)
Bootstrapping a startup... (Score:5, Funny)
Outsourcing IT overseas? (Score:4, Insightful)
using the web to find native translators instead of using over priced local ones
Did I miss something? Aren't we opposed to outsourcing jobs overseas? Don't our big tech companies consider us "overpriced local programmers?" So, when it's a little guy, outsourcing to cheap, overseas labour is "innovative," but when IBM/Sun/Microsoft/Dell does it, it's Anti-American, and worthy of a global-scale boycott?
Startups (Score:5, Insightful)
Those with short attention spans are doomed to repeat recent history.
Unless your startup needs a factory, gobs of employees, or other extensive capital, you don't need megabucks, only kilobucks. No need for snotty VCs, selling off rights to future IP, etc. It's still hard, but 95% of existing businesses have done it.
You just have to start small. One of the worst legacies the dot.boom left us was the general perception that businesses have to be large to be successful. Nothing could be further from the truth. I don't have the current statistics, but last I heard them a few years ago, 80% of businesses in the US had 20 or fewer employees. In other words, small business is king.
I've worked closely with many individuals who have started businesses from scratch. It's not cheap, but it doesn't require millions from venture capitalists. Your credit cards, retirement savings, relatives and a trip to the local bank are often all that's needed to start out small. And small is all that you need. You'll be working your butt off eighteen hours a day, but you can do it.
If this is software, you've got a headstart over most other businesses, since you don't need to carry inventory, rent warehouses, or run factories. All you need are salesmen and developers. The developers may be expensive, but your salesmen will be cheap, since they'll be bringing in their own paychecks. As a bonus, your product is infinitely reproducible at no cost. Heck, you can even contract out development to bring in cash flow while your main product is getting ready.
Your hardware isn't going to be that expensive, if you stop thinking like a gamer. You can get away with old i386 or Sparc5 boxes for your servers. If the software is ultimately an end-user product, you'll need a variety of current hardware to test on, but otherwise it's a luxury you can't afford.
Re:Startups (Score:2)
Where you will be stared at as if you had just landed from Neptune.
Unless you have some nice juicy collateral, that is. Something on the order of a paid-off half million dollar commercial complex that the bank can sink five-ton chromed hooks into for a $20,000 loan at 28% interest and $4800 in up-front fees (which must be paid out of the loan, so you get to pay 28% interest on the fees too).
Oh, and don't even think about the SBA. lol It would cost you the whole $20,000 ju
Re:Startups (Score:2)
If you walk in without a proper business plan, no cosigners or references, wearing a ratty Slashdot teeshirt, then you might as well stay home and bitch about how unfair the world is.
But banks are in the business of loaning money. It won't be easy, but that's what they're there for. Don't go to a large national bank like BofA. Go to a local community bank instead. Yes, you're probably going to need collateral, but it will be on the order
Re:Startups (Score:2)
Work Your Tail Off... (Score:3, Interesting)
Huminity which has been on /. before. (Score:2, Insightful)
CompleteLinux.Info startup (Score:2)
As a Linux Admin, one thing I have realized I'm not very good at is marketing -- I tried Google AdWords, but I didn't get a high-enough hit ratio to survive.
Maybe it is just hard to produce a non-free product or service for the open-source community. Of course, if the demand is there, I'm sure businesses would be the ones to provide the cash-flow...
(DNS seems to be an issue right now though.)
The book "Under the Radar" covers this big time. (Score:3, Interesting)
One of the big points made in the book is that the incredible overhead of venture capitalists can, and often does, sink a startup company.
The book covers Arnold Kling's [arnoldkling.com] attempt to start homefair.com [homefair.com] (an online real estate service) way before anybody had a clue about what the Internet could do for real estate. It's funny/frustrating to read how many clueless bankers and real estate agents blew him off.
also 'good to great' (Score:2)
Best of all don't buy the book, save some money and read it online [jimcollins.com].
My own experience with snotty (and clueless) VC (Score:4, Insightful)
Unfortunately, as I said, it was 1999. Smart VCs like John Doerr had seen good business opportunities in companies like Yahoo!, Amazon, AOL, and others, and made huge wads of $$$ for their firms through shrewd investments. The clueless wannabe VCs apparently missed the point that-- internet or not-- the success of investors like Doerr was based on careful evaluation of business plans and business models. The Doerr wannabes apparently said to themselves "John Doerr made a lot investing in internet companies, so we have to do the same." I figure that's how multiple internet pet shops and ridiculous internet businesses got funded, with many even going to IPO without having anything resembling profit in the foreseeable future or even a decent roadmap to achieving profitability. In
Getting back to how this was relevant to my personal experience, the founders of the company (employees #1 and #2) would make their presentation to some VC, again, showing that the company's software could produce billions of dollars of value for companies in the target market, and the response was almost always the same: "OK, but what's your internet story?"
Most of them were really snotty, saying that "these days," anything that isn't internet-based doesn't have a chance, or something equally short-sighted and clueless. But they said it with such authority and such snottiness that it would make even the strong of stomach want to vomit.
At the time, I said "Let's just change the name of the company to 'e-(Real Name of Company)-dot-com' and we'll be swimming in money!
After that, I became a big fan of F**kedCompany [fuckedcompany.com], which now seems to include non-dot-coms a lot more than it used to. Back in the day, it was more focused on reporting disasters in dot-coms that probably never should have been funded. Every time I saw another online business with no clear sustainable revenue stream (the $$$ from idiot VCs desperate to pour money into anything dot-com doesn't count-- it has been proven not to have been sustainable) go down the toilet, with an amusing report on F**kedCompany, I would snicker and say to myself "Yeah, I've got your internet story RIGHT HERE!"
--Mark
Startup Incubator (Score:2)
I worked for a now defunct non-dot-com company that tried to become a dot-com and it succeeded in the fact that it failed like so many other dot-coms. One of the more hare-brained ideas was for an incubator incubator. I think he meant a some kind of factory for minting startup companies.
Whatever happened to "start small" (Score:3, Insightful)
My bet with my own shareware company is to start small and hang in there. Right now it is just a job for when I come home, but eventually, hopefully, it will build up to something.
I know a few guys that run brick and mortar and web based businesses, and there whole secret is persistence. Just, start small, then, hang in there. Look how long Linux hung in at the hobbiest level before it really took off? How was 1994, 1995, etc, for Linux? Really? Those were some lean years.
Start small, keep building, then, hang in there. Either you will make it or you won't.
examples of startups to look at (Score:4, Informative)
a good read for any startups is Joel Spolsky's [joelonsoftware.com] journey in building [joelonsoftware.com] his company from scratch [joelonsoftware.com]. Put aside your predjudices about his software origins [microsoft.com] or the market he is aiming at [fogcreek.com], but make sure you read and digest some of the ideas [joelonsoftware.com].
It's a cheap way to read how he's organised his company [fogcreek.com] from 1999 to the present.
Re:Prepare for SPAM! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Prepare for SPAM! (Score:4, Informative)
While the comment remains true, I hope the mods will send him right back down to -1. It looks like a troll charging up karma to me.
Re:Prepare for SPAM! (Score:2, Insightful)
I think you're being a tad too cynical and perhaps just a little snotty. How else are they supposed to let you know that they have your information on file, and provide you an opportunity to remove it? I mean, even Majordomo sends out confirmation email.
If they sent you some "newsletter" every day because you're a member, that I can see as shitty marketing, but a single email is hardly some spam
Re:Prepare for SPAM! (Score:2)
When evaluating services like this, I want to see who's already there. I want to do this without calling attention to myself or anyone else. If I like what I see, then I'll participate further -- fill out a profile, hook up to already-registered friends, tell other people about it, etc. Forcing me to offer up five contacts as tribute violates this principle.
www.mailinator.com [mailinator.com]
Re:Full Text - Karma Burn (Score:4, Funny)
Here's a karma burn. MOD PARENT DOWN!
The site is large and not going to buckle under the load of Slashdot's linking it. Ads are few and non-obtrusive. No registration is required to view. Let alone the fact that copying the whole of the text is illegal. But, hey, since when did the typical /.er care about copyright infringement.
Oh, and the text is mutilated. Our friendly AC replaced "power" with "penis size" in the final sentence. Then again, maybe that's why it's being modded up as insightful?
Re:Full Text - Karma Burn (Score:2)
You gotta admit that the story is much more compelling with the mutilated text.