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Byrne Hobart

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  1. Snap Inc: How To Read the S-1

    Whenever a hot company raises a round or IPOs, there’s a traditional Hacker News ritual where people dig through the S-1 looking for reasons to hate it. According to Hacker News, the typical well-funded tech company is a company that: 1. Has no real technology advantage 2. Is losing

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  2. Understanding Netflix

    Netflix’s ostensible goal is to win the Moment of Truth: when you’re home from work and too tired to do anything but vegetate, are they your first choice? But for investors, this breaks down into two separate, related missions: 1. Be available to anyone who enjoys passive entertainment

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  3. Tech Investment Themes for the Next Five Years

    High Confidence * Large-cap tech is undervalued. Big tech companies are mature enough that you can value them based on their current financials. But every one of these companies is run by a crazy visionary who has already scrapped the whole company’s model at least once. Bet on that happening

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  4. Smart Money, Dumb Money, Zen Money

    Active management used to be easier. Information took forever to percolate out. Big buyers and sellers accidentally tipped their hands, giving more nimble traders opportunities. Good analysts at small banks didn’t move stocks, but even mediocre analysts at big banks did. And short-term correlations were lower than medium-term correlations:

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  5. The Uber of X Will Be Uber

    There is a great deal of ruin in a [corporation] - Adam Smith, approximately Traditionally, Uber has a very happy New Year indeed. Midnight to five AM on January 1st is one of the peaks of inelastic demand for a ride home, so they usually start the year having just

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  6. Why Netflix Competitors Target Countries, Not Genres

    Streaming video service iflix, the Netflix of Southeast Asia, has raised at least $90m, bringing their total amount raised to $165m. The investor roster is not who you’d expect for investors buying into an early-stage growth company — they raised most of their funds from cable companies. Cable companies care

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  7. A Paid Product Won’t Matter for Twitter

    Twitter is considering a paid product for power users, offering better analytics and posting tools targeted at marketers and journalists. This has mildly excited a few people — if Twitter can’t grow its monthly active user number, at least it can get a few of them to pay for it!

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  8. The Millennialization of Financial News

    In a way, CNBC is the perfect business: it has a great brand name, and it caters to a rich audience. CNBC managed to create the world’s most lucrative reality TV programming, by finding stars who are already famous, and paying them $0. Really, the only problem is that

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  9. Cryptocurrencies and Post-Post-Scarcity Economics

    The number of UNIX installations has grown to 10, with more expected * The UNIX Programmer’s Manual, 1972 Post-scarcity economics is a fun thought experiment: what would you do if everything you needed was available for free? As rich countries asymptotically approach that state (we’re all post-scarcity with respect

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