Peter Thiel’s CS183: Startup - Class 1 Notes Essay
The path from 0 to 1 might start with asking and answering three questions. First, what is valuable? Second, what can I do? And third, what is nobody else doing?
The questions themselves are straightforward. Question one illustrates the difference between business and academia; in academia, the number one sin is plagiarism, not triviality. So much o... See more
The questions themselves are straightforward. Question one illustrates the difference between business and academia; in academia, the number one sin is plagiarism, not triviality. So much o... See more
Peter Thiel • Peter Thiel’s CS183: Startup - Class 1 Notes Essay
The easiest answer to “why startups?” is negative: because you can’t develop new technology in existing entities. There’s something wrong with big companies, governments, and non-profits. Perhaps they can’t recognize financial needs; the federal government, hamstrung by its own bureaucracy, obviously overcompensates some while grossly undercompensa... See more
Peter Thiel • Peter Thiel’s CS183: Startup - Class 1 Notes Essay
We tend to think very statistically about the future. And statistics tells us that it’s random. We can’t predict the future; we can only think probabilistically. If the market follows a random walk, there’s no sense trying to out-calculate it.
But there’s an alternative math metaphor we might use: calculus. The calculus metaphor asks whether and how... See more
But there’s an alternative math metaphor we might use: calculus. The calculus metaphor asks whether and how... See more