I told yah I was gonna start blogging more - links
Fred Wilson is hanging out where I dropped my cell phone into the canal - at the Rialto bridge. Mah dai!
Anina goes on and on about LeWeb3. I think she had a good time.
Anil moves back to NYC. Now THAT’s what I call a loyal husband. But Alaina is worth it. I wonder if that means he’s still working with 6A?
Mark Cuban is my favorite CEO blogger. Here’s his thoughful insights into finding and culture in the NBA.
Sam Sethi and Mike Butcher are blogging - here.
Dave further elaborates on one of our only rules at the SVAS:
BTW, I ran into Mitch Kapor at some conference, with Stewart and Guy, and he asked me about the SVAS and asked if he could join. I got to deliver the news. “Yes you can join, but you’d have to divest.” I felt sorry for Mitch, but rules are rules.
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Apparently others found my account interesting. Now if I could ONLY GET THEM TO BLOG ABOUT OUR PRODUCT! Well you just wait. When our V 1.2 comes out - just try and STOP ME from becoming a PR machine. An engine of virtually no limits.
Loic’s “The end of blogger conferences”.
Everybody seems to like the new ValleyWag.
$670M spent in one day - on-line last week. That’s a record.

December 20th, 2006 at 3:05 am
[…] Ik heb wel eens eerder geschreven over het verschil tussen ‘kleine’ en ‘grote’ social networking diensten. De kleintjes hebben de toekomst wat mij betreft, en via Marc Canter vond ik een interessant artikel getiteld “Anatomy of a Successful Social Network” dat ongeveer hetzelfde zegt. Maar het wel beter uitlegt;-) “As of now, most mainstream social networks allow us to do pretty much the same things; contact friends, send email, post to forums, blog, etc. On the other hand, the niche social networks are expected to have these standard features in addition to services that are specific to that niche. For example, a social network for bookworms will have features that let its users showcase their favorite books. The generic social networks can never attain this goal unless they provide a framework to allow custom tools to be easily integrated (widgets on steroids). In the end, no one can predict where social networks are headed, but millions of people today still spend time on niche forums. This should be enough to give us faith in this market.“ […]
December 20th, 2006 at 7:20 am
[…] Marc Canter’s blogging rampage: Linkapalooza. […]
December 20th, 2006 at 11:49 am
Of course I’m staying with 6A! I’m doing the same work, just based on the east coast.
December 20th, 2006 at 12:34 pm
[…] Turns out that Anil IS staying at SixApart. […]