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by mixmax
2855 days ago
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your comment reminds me of the commentary on Drew Houston's announcement of a product called dropbox (you might have heard of it...) here on HN 10 years ago. (1) "This is nothing new", "I could build this myself", "you have to install something, nobody does that", etc. etc. The key to a successful company is not being first, not (only) having a great technical solution, and not having tech noone else does. The key is an umbrella of technology, business sense, marketing ability, salesmanship and much more. Andreeses/Horowwitz probably see a whole umbrella, and not only the tech. (1) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8863 |
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Note that he didn't make any of these criticisms. What he did say is that there is little information about what the company's innovation is, and to public appearances what the company is doing is not novel. He then went on compare the company to another one with an impressive team of cryptographers behind it who developed an impressive, novel solution to the problem at hand. Further, he's made this point from a position of domain expertise in the field.
Frankly I don't think raising the spectre of famous "wrong" comments about Dropbox constitutes a meaningful response to his point. He outlined a substantive critique. In order for a criticism to be a middlebrow dismissal it has to be both middlebrow and dismissive. What you're responding to isn't, and doesn't fit the template you're invoking.