Joined May 2018
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Making Friends at KubeCon A pictorial guide 1/?
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The Great American Safari 5,400 kilometres through the cornfields of Nebraska, lakeshores of Wisconsin, and windswept plains of Wyoming. Serengeti of the west, steady and endless. "take me down a road that's a little bit windy to a place they still put sugar in their iced tea"
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Devils Tower
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"take me down a road that's a little bit windy to a place they still put sugar in their iced tea where the women are fine and the love is fair hey driver, you can drop me off anywhere"
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KMAC - Kevin Damaso retweeted
Some of you founders need to focus less on burning man and focus on fixing the things that are burning at your startups, man
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13 Dec 2023
Too many are focused on progress within the same few areas like SaaS or low-code tools. This overconcentration comes at a huge cost: brilliant people who could build the next massive leap forward are instead grinding out incremental innovations that others would have soon found. To fix this we're launching the 50Y Progress Index. Our lives are unfathomably better today than they were just a century ago thanks to breakthroughs in energy, materials, bioengineering, transportation, computation, communications, and more. This progress defines modern life. How we commute, how we communicate, and whether we’re healthy are defined by technological breakthroughs. These transformative innovations have led to more abundance. Food [1], energy [2] and aluminum [3] are 80-90% cheaper than in the late 1800s, air travel is 7X cheaper than in 1950 [4], computing is 10 trillion times cheaper per calculation than in the 1940s [5], and communication is 10 million times cheaper per megabyte than in the mid 90s [6]. But in startup land, too many are focusing on too few areas with poor expected societal and financial ROI. For example, the number of startups competing for customers in a single $50B market can vary by a factor of almost 1,000! We wondered what a modern treasure map would look like, but for startup opportunities. To answer that question, we’re launching our first attempt at the list of Top Underfunded Opportunities: massive markets with little startup investment and ripe conditions for disruption. Based on our analysis, we selected five – sometimes counterintuitive! – progress areas based on their Opportunity Ratio: the U.S. market size divided by the total invested in startups in that market, as well as any key enabling technologies or macro tailwinds. Here’s what the numbers tell us: Let’s talk about the (paper) elephant in the room. The top opportunities on this list were counterintuitive, even to us! Coming in at a ratio of $15,400 of spending for every $1 invested is paper products. It turns out that we buy a lot of paper: from disposable tissue paper, toilet paper, and paper towels, to the cardboard used to ship every ecommerce delivery. Very little has been done to imagine better forms of paper or better ways to make paper than (slowly) growing trees, chopping them down, and then squeezing them into thin sheets. What if we could use bioengineering to grow paper directly, without the trees? It could be a big win for energy efficiency, land use, the environment, and the entrepreneurs & scientists who figure it out. You can tell similar stories about the potential for reimagining other top opportunities on our list, like plastics, chemicals, housing, and education. Paper might not seem sexy but improving the methods of production of paper would be a huge deal. It might seem odd for a hard tech investor like 50Y to be highlighting the unusual ratio of spend to startup investment in the paper industry, but the numbers don’t lie!  Besides sharing some top opportunity areas, we’re also highlighting a few where the ratios are particularly bad. These are oversaturated markets where many founders fail by competing to solve low impact problems in similar ways. The overconcentration of startups working on SaaS, marketing software, and low-code tools leads to low opportunity ratios. Even if you expect a new startup solution to outperform others and these industries to grow rapidly, the resulting impact on the economy would be comparatively very small. The full Treasure Map of opportunities is much bigger and we hope to share more about it soon, as well as many open source datasets that our community has helped to gather along the way. This is a rough first pass at quantifying high-leverage areas to build. If you’re interested in exploring counterfactual opportunities like these or contributing to the Progress Index effort, reach out! At @fiftyyears, we’re long-term optimists backing breakthrough founders. The 50Y Progress Index is our attempt at assessing how technology can shape the next fifty years. We believe that progress compounds and technology, thoughtfully stewarded, can uplift the prosperity of all. Check it out and let us know what you think! progress.fiftyyears.com/ A note on the methodology: We searched databases for startups founded in the last 6 years that raised $5M or more. We also analyzed total capital invested in companies founded in the last 10 years to get a sense for how much capital has been invested in certain markets. This is our first iteration of this approach, and we’d love your suggestions and feedback on how to better structure this. 1: seekingalpha.com/article/926… 2: commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/F… 3: pcdb.santafe.edu/graph.php?c… 4: researchgate.net/figure/Evol… 5: docs.google.com/spreadsheets… 6: sciencedirect.com/science/ar… 👏👏 @fuelfive & @PeregrineBadger and the Progress Index volunteers for the incredible foundation building here!
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KMAC - Kevin Damaso retweeted
We get asked a lot if we have any data on the financial impact of license changes. The public data available is limited, but here's a look at how at least some companies have fared pre- and post-license change. redmonk.com/rstephens/2024/0…
I also don’t think any of these license changes have suddenly generated all kinds of additional revenue for the companies have done these changes. I could be wrong but that’s my thoughts.
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KMAC - Kevin Damaso retweeted
I often find inspirations from films for my work, but rarely from any particular character. One notable exception would be Alain Delon's Jef Costello in Le Samouraï, whose trademark trench coat has remained the underlying influence for many of mine.
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KMAC - Kevin Damaso retweeted
Was testing a new web page in prod, and @project_kmac just said "hopefully it won't Crowdstrike." It's moved beyond a disaster and a meme to a verb.
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KMAC - Kevin Damaso retweeted
First it was the strange hue of the trees now it’s a real life nightmare. This is very hard to take, it must be shared because none of us can escape this. A catastrophe like we’ve never known is unfolding & exploding at an incredible rate. 🧵 #tasmania
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KMAC - Kevin Damaso retweeted
Which of you, if he opens a new tab, will read the old tab, or if reading an old tab will open a new one? Finish the old tab and then open a new tab, and both are read. And no one after opening new tabs wants old tabs, but says “I should do something else with my Saturday.”
25 Apr 2024
Jesus told her, “Go, close the tab you are using.” “I am using no tabs,” she replied. Jesus said to her, “You are right when you say you are using no tabs. The fact is, you have had 56 tabs open, and the one you now have open you are not using.”
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