iThink iWant iPhone
Bloody hell, yeah! iThink iWant iPhone. Anyone wanting to gift that to me?
business + science + philosophy + technology
Bloody hell, yeah! iThink iWant iPhone. Anyone wanting to gift that to me?
One fine evening the following email was shot to the Precimark team
by Paras Chopra, Founder of Precimark
Date: 26 June 2007, barely a month after Precimark
was started
Subject: See Ya Precimark
Body:
Hey Folks,
It seems to me that no body among us is serious about Precimark.
Nobody has a fire burning inside him/her to carry on the business, our
present approach is flawed, and everyone is taking this as a part-time
job. Startups do not work this way. Freelancing work this way and we
don’t see our future as freelancers, do we?
So, Aakanksha and me have decided to take a few realistic decisions…..
One fine evening the following email was shot to the Precimark team
by Paras Chopra, Founder of Precimark
Date: 26 June 2007, barely a month after Precimark
was started
Subject: See Ya Precimark
Body:
Hey Folks,
It seems to me that no body among us is serious about Precimark.
Nobody has a fire burning inside him/her to carry on the business, our
present approach is flawed, and everyone is taking this as a part-time
job. Startups do not work this way. Freelancing work this way and we
don’t see our future as freelancers, do we?
So, Aakanksha and me have decided to take a few realistic decisions.
We see the future of Precimark taking one of the following states:
1. Being shut-off completely
2. Being in hibernation mode till the right times
3. Being sold to someone
Sorry guys, but we had to take this decision for the benefit of
all. Nobody among us is serious about this venture and we shouldn’t
fool ourselves.
Drop in your comments.
Regards,
Paras Chopra
PS: I also plan to put this email on www.precimark.com and send
this email to all clients whose work we are (supposedly) doing.
PPS: We won’t see Precimark as a faliure. We will see Precimark
as a successful experiment.
So, as you can see, Precimark was put into an inactive mode beginning
26th June 2007 due to reasons obvious in the email. Paras is summarizing
the lessons learned by him during his beautiful journey called Precimark.
Lessons in Entrepreneurship as taught by Precimark
1. Startup is not a summer project. You cannot be
involved in a startup on a part-time basis. Either give your 100% to
a startup or just don’t do it. Especially, do not consider a startup
as a summer project. It is not.
2. Communication gaps are inevitable. No matter how
hard you try to keep communication smoothly flowing, someone will either
miss an important piece of information or he will mis-interpret it.
This is a fact and cannot be eliminated.
3. Online collaboration does not happen. It is next
to impossible. Either the team should work at a same physical location
or there should not be a team altogether.
4. Respond to clients at the earliest. You are in
need of business, not they.
5. Be professional in your dealings. Check your grammar
usage in emails and keep your writing style contemporary and to-the-point.
Abstruse text adds death the point.
6. Choose your team with EXTREME care. They should
be as passionate about the idea as you are.
7. Decide on early who does what and in how much time (deadlines,
that is). If not, irresponsibility and blame-storming may take
over.
8. Before starting, take an objective and fair assessment of
the idea. People have biases of being too rosy of their ideas.
Avoid this bias. Moreover, focus on flaws of the ideas. Try to eliminate
or minimize those flaws.
9. Do not be afraid of folding up when you see the
idea/execution is fundamentally flawed and/or things have gone wrong
beyond correction.
10. Do not be too emotionally attached to your startup and
ideologies. Try to be as objective as possible. Observe that
earlier in the article it was said that you should be passionate about
your startup. Be very clear of the idea that one can be passionate about
something while being objective about it at the same time.
11. If you think you have a brilliant and unique idea, chances
are that someone already is executing that idea. So, the key
to success is execution. Everybody has ideas and they are dime a dozen.
12. Never reveal important details (such as IPs, passwords,
etc.) to all people who join the startup or to clients. If
you, however, reveal, make sure they sign NDAs (Non Disclosure Agreements).
13. Never hire a part-timer but use free lancers as
much as possible.
14. Refrain from sharing equity as much as possible.
Try using debt.
Those were the important results discovered from the Precimark journey.
Next time, each and every person involved with Precimark will hopefuly
start another venture and it won’t be an experiment then, it will be
a full-time job instead. Wish them success!
Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish.
Paras Chopra
Founder of Precimark
Note: A copy of this article has also been posted here and here
PS: The following points refer to the reactions from people
and self after the above article was posted. Points will be
added as new and new reactions get noticed.
1. Being a maverick is not at all bad unless someone
gets hurt by it.
2. Everyone will be asking how you are feeling. Tell
them that you are feeling fantsatic and wise.
3. People will want to buy your business or help you rise from
the ashes (as if you have burnt the company down).
Listen to them carefully but do not get emotional.
4. Respect your decision and maintain your personal integrity.
Never trade your integrity for anything.
The Free Geek has written a DIY ( Do It Yourself, you H. erectus ) guide for helping you in your smooth transition to the next stage of human evolution: H. cyborg. Read this excellent guide here to know how can you make yourself a full-blown cyborg. I wonder if the author himself is trying to become a cyborg.
Nirvana is just besides you, waiting for you while laughing insanely at you for your neglect of it.
Pukhraj posted this comment on a post on this blog.
“Just gave a quick read through your blog. Stumbled here while searching for something. I was amazed with the commonality in thought, a certain “kind” of people have.
Your thoughts on consciousness, philosophy, entropy and existential angst are totally in line with what I (and some other acquaintances) have experimented in the past. It’s just that I have found a few definitive answers.
Apart from that, I am an entrepreneur too!
Be pure, be fundamental.
Pukhraj
Just wanted to add one more thing. I have dabbled a lot with singularity, transhumanism, epistemology, existentialism, reductionism, Illuminati etc etc…to find the answers. I also understand why we even have the patience to hear people like Dawkins and his ideas like militant atheism. We are hungry.
But the only thing I would say is that – the West, with it’s extreme indulgence in renaissance-ish individuality, obtuse morality, sheathed conscience and placebo-ed science really hits the wall when investigating something as esoteric as consciousness and existence. Look at people like Sartre, Kerouac, Weininger, Nietzsche, Orwell, Dostoevsky, Machiavelli, Foucault, Freud, Kant. Look how they really hit the wall after a certain effort. The individuality, the ego to retain the purity of their thought, to be unadulterated makes them go berserk in the end (where insanity is a relative term). The whole setup around them failed to give them the right feedback and the “spiritual” perception.
On the other hand, the East just sucks with it’s orgiastic desire to fulfill the colonial ambition to become the new Renaissance man. And the thousands of years of existence have really twisted the notions such as God into some kind of anthropomorphic deities which we should respect out of fear. People worship Buddha and Nanak and not admire them as researchers. They were just a few researchers who did well. We should better read their “research papers” rather then drooling in the collectivist orgies. These guys were solid! After some definitive experiences with the consciousness, I tried reading them. They really think the way we think. And I don’t really believe in anything until I experience/experiment with it. Falling down and rising up strong, being a absolutist etc etc….
Here’s a quote from my blog:
Knowledge (not information – which has some current relevance) is passed from generation to generation, as a kind of gene. It’s inside us. You already know, what our ancestors knew. Most of our life is spent in verifying it. When you read a good book, don’t you feel as if, “I already know this†or “If I had written, I had written the same thingâ€Â? Analyze this, most of your favorite quotes by great people are like an extension of your own outlook. So you like the cohesion in thought processes, not that you learn something new. As far as information is concerned, it’s like the reoccurring proof of basic theorems of knowledge, time and again. Information science is a cycle and a shackle.”
Here is my reply to his comments.
“Hey,
Got your long but relevant comments on my blog. Yes, it is indeed surprising when you meet people who have similar thinking. It really adds strength to your convictions. Doesn’t it?
Really, I am quite surprised by the fact that my beliefs and convictions have evolved by such a radical degree that it is now hard to stay complacent with what I believe now. And this is because I never know if what I believe is really true (if at all we can classify beliefs as true or false) or not. Who knows, one year from now I might be laughing at my present model of the universe.
So, my biggest lesson in life (of just above 20 years) has been this: Enjoy life at the moment and leave everything else for people to think upon. I really believe that scientists and religious people are deluded lot in what they believe to be true. The only truth is that we shouldn’t be too concerned about things as things are liable to change and for every explanation about a thing, there is at least one more explanation which explains the thing with exactly the same accuracy and precision.
Hence, just enjoy little moments of life. You have everything in you which you need to make sense of life. We, humans, just love to complicate things..
Regards,
Paras Chopra”
Check out the presentation below. It is about my new company called Precimark.
Click here to goto the company’s website.
Hello Earthlings,
This is Synthia talking to you. I am a new organism in this world. So, everything is new to me. But, I vaguely remember that my father (or maybe God, umm.. I don’t remember) is Dr. J. Craig Venter. I guess he created me by stripping off all non-essential genes from Mycoplasma and is calling me Mycoplasma laboratorium. Well, he can call me anything he likes but I prefer the name Synthia. It’s chick, you know.
Now, people tell me that he is out there to patent me as “the world’s first-ever human-made species.” I really don’t know what patenting means, but it surely sounds strange. Will I be made a slave? Just because someone has created me, does it mean that they will use me as they wish? After all, I have a life of my own too. Right?
So, this is my humble request to all you sane earthlings: please stop the patent process on me and my fellow synthetic organisms. Nobody owns us. Either stop *creating* us or stop your plans for *exploiting* us. If you people don’t take my request seriously, I warn you that I can turn dangerous. You are yet to see my angry face. Me and my fellows can wipe up you guys. So, better is to decide now. What do you want: our freedom or your destruction?
With lotsa hope from you,
Synthia
[Spokesmicrobe, ASO (Association of Syntheic Organisms)]
Finally, I found the video on YouTube. Though I’m a bit unclear of the training mechanism for rat neurons, the video is a must watch nevertheless

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