Fabrice Grinda

  • Playing with
    Unicorns
  • Featured
  • Categories
  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Newsletter
  • AI
  • IT
    • EN
    • FR
    • AR
    • BN
    • DA
    • DE
    • ES
    • FA
    • HI
    • ID
    • JA
    • KO
    • NL
    • PL
    • PT-BR
    • PT-PT
    • RO
    • RU
    • TH
    • UK
    • UR
    • VI
    • ZH-HANS
    • ZH-HANT
× Image Description

Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Menu

  • IT
    • EN
    • FR
    • AR
    • BN
    • DA
    • DE
    • ES
    • FA
    • HI
    • ID
    • JA
    • KO
    • NL
    • PL
    • PT-BR
    • PT-PT
    • RO
    • RU
    • TH
    • UK
    • UR
    • VI
    • ZH-HANS
    • ZH-HANT
  • Home
  • Playing with Unicorns
  • Featured
  • Categories
  • Portfolio
  • About Me
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy Policy
Salta al contenuto
Fabrice Grinda

Internet entrepreneurs and investors

× Image Description

Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

Fabrice Grinda

Internet entrepreneurs and investors

Mese: Agosto 2013

Absolute must read for all entrepreneurs!

Absolute must read for all entrepreneurs!

James Altucher just published on Techcrunch a 100 point FAQ on starting an Internet business. It’s straight to the point and very clear. I basically agree with every point!

All entrepreneurs should read it, especially first time entrepreneurs:
http://techcrunch.com/2013/08/24/the-ultimate-cheat-sheet-for-starting-and-running-your-business/

Autore FabricePubblicato il Agosto 28, 2013Agosto 7, 2023Categorie Imprenditorialità, Interesting ArticlesLascia un commento su Absolute must read for all entrepreneurs!

The end of an era!

The end of an era!

PC World just exited the print market, marking the exit of the last general-interest PC magazine. I am actually surprised that it did not happen earlier. Magazines readership as a whole is declining as readers are moving online. This is all the more true in technology where tech nerds’ thirst for immediacy is pushing us to sites like Techmeme, Techcrunch, Engadget and The Verge.

On top of that the PC market as a whole is declining as it being supplanted by tablets that are “good enough”. Worse, our PCs are generally “good enough” themselves. We are no longer waiting for the next generation graphic card, hard drive, motherboard or processor. Instead we are waiting for the next smartphone with longer battery life, faster processor, higher resolution screen and next generation operating system. It’s no longer Windows clone makers vs. Apple. It’s Android clone makers (especially Samsung) vs. Apple. The battleground has shifted and Android is the new Windows.

That said the passing of PC World brought about a bout of nostalgia. Growing up I was addicted to PC Magazine, Byte, Computer Shopper, Computer Gaming World and PC Week. They all played a role in my life. PC Magazine had the best reviews and great columns by John C. Dvorak. Byte had Jerry Pournelle’s Chaos Manor. PC Week, which was only accessible to industry professionals, had the best and most current industry news (being weekly instead of bi-weekly or monthly). I was delighted to get access to it after I created Princeton International Computers which exported computer equipment from the US to Europe and helped me pay for my lifestyle in college and provided the capital that ultimately became the seed money of my first real Internet startup. Computer Gaming World introduced me to many of my favorite games. Computer Shopper was like porn for computer nerds. You could find anything and everything and I was fascinating by the ever declining prices of hardware brought about by Moore’s Law and the insane competition in the industry.

While I was running my computer company, I was upgrading my hardware every few weeks. I was replacing the motherboard, hard drive, tape drive, modem, Ethernet card or some other component. I was always tinkering with my computer and tweaking it and those magazines were an endless source of inspiration.

In the mid to late 1980s, I remember expectedly waiting for their release. I had become a very loyal client of one of the few newsstands with enough depth to have them all. I knew expected street release dates and would impatiently go check for them on said day. I would be devastated when their arrival was delayed by a day or two. In college I clearly remember how much joy I would get going to my mailbox expecting to receive them. Yes I was, and remain, a huge nerd 🙂

I would not give up my current tech news sources for anything, but really have a special spot in my heart for those publication as I grew up with them. Reading about their passing I was actually surprised how many others felt similarly about them. They clearly resonated in a similar way for Harry McCracken at Time Magazine and Alexis Madrigal at The Atlantic. They eloquently describe their emotional attachment to them in their well written articles:

  • http://techland.time.com/2013/07/11/pcworld-exits-print-and-the-era-of-computer-magazines-ends/?iid=tl-main-lead
  • http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2013/07/an-ode-to-em-computer-shopper-em/277713/

Computer magazines brought us dreams, aspirations and hopes. In showing us what was always around the corner, we gleaned at the wonderful world of tomorrow which we now inhabit. We grew up with them and through them. May they rest in peace!

Autore FabricePubblicato il Agosto 16, 2013Maggio 29, 2021Categorie Riflessioni personali, Gadget tecnologici, Interesting Articles2 commenti su The end of an era!

How to live

How to live

By Otilia Aionesei

When I think about sixteen-century European writers, I think of a heavily ornamented writing style and grand themes such as history, religion and ethics. I had no reason to believe Montaigne will be different than most Renaissance writers, but what I discovered in Sarah Bakewell’s How to Live: A Life of Montaigne is a modern thinker in every sense of the word. The book is a short biography of Montaigne, and a wonderful celebration of being alive and conscious. Every chapter is based on one of Montaigne’s Essays, and attempts to answer questions such as how to cope with loss, death, or failure? In teaching how to live, Montaigne exposes as accurately as possible how he felt when he himself faced these dilemmas. He does not attempt to answer how you should live, as he is more interested in human emotions rather than the ethical fabric of our actions. His sincerity, his humbleness, and the modern character of his themes will strike you. So, it is worth looking at all twenty questions explored by Bakewell in her book, because every single one of them can resonate with twenty first century readers.

How to Live:

  1. Don’t worry about death: Focus on being alive instead.
  2. Pay Attention: The present is the most immediate, so pay full attention to it.
  3. Be Born: The first years of your life will determine who you will become.
  4. Read a lot, forget most of what you read, and be slow-witted: Forgetting what you’ve learned will allow you to follow your own naked thinking rather than others’ ideas – which can be deceiving.
  5. Survive love and loss: Transform a being from a real-life person into an entity entirely under your control and live for others such as your friends. Montaigne also discovered the therapeutic benefit of writing when coping with loss.
  6. Use little tricks: Use tricks of your imaginations when dealing with mild emotions or severe depression. If you grieve the loss of something valuable pretend that you never had it in the first place. On the other hand, if you are tired of your possessions, pretend you have lost everything. You can’t miss what you never had.
  7. Question everything: Always investigate knowledge before accepting it.
  8. Keep a private room behind the shop: Escape daily in your own, private space.
  9. Be convivial. Live with others: Be social, and open to debates and conversations.
  10. Wake from the sleep of habit: See things from others’ perspective. Patters can be threatening to your intellect and wellbeing.
  11. Live temperately: Don’t try to be extraordinary. Being truly human means being moderate and accepting that we all share the same human condition.
  12. Guard you humanity: Don’t get too involved in the affairs of the world.
  13. Do something no one had done before: Write, be creative, be innovative.
  14. See the world: Travel the world with your eyes wide open.
  15. Do a good job, but not too good a job: If you are good at something, be aware of the responsibilities attached to your talent.
  16. Philosophize only by accident: Do not try to be a philosopher, nor a moralist, simply write from the heart.
  17. Reflect on everything. Regret nothing: Accept whatever happens in life and don’t attempt to change the past.
  18. Give up control: When you write or create art you need to accept that others will criticize and do what they please with your work.
  19. Be ordinary and imperfect: Learn to live and embrace your own imperfections. Flaws are the fundamental conditions of humans’ lives.
  20. Let life be its own answer: The answer to “How to live?” is in you. Montaigne suggests this by offering his own life experiences as an example.

How to live is in essence Montaigne’s blueprint of eudaimonia – a way of living that can best be translated as happiness.

Autore FabricePubblicato il Agosto 11, 2013Maggio 29, 2021Categorie Libri3 commenti su How to live

Search

Recent Posts

  • Il significato della vita
  • Aggiornamento FJ Labs Q2 2025
  • Conversazione con Auren Hoffman sul mondo DaaS: portafogli diversificati, vendite secondarie e feste a cena
  • Episodio 50: Tendenze del mercato dei capitali di rischio
  • Decodificare il futuro: AI, mercato dei capitali di rischio e mercati

Recent Comments

    Archives

    • Luglio 2025
    • Giugno 2025
    • Maggio 2025
    • Aprile 2025
    • Marzo 2025
    • Febbraio 2025
    • Gennaio 2025
    • Dicembre 2024
    • Novembre 2024
    • Ottobre 2024
    • Settembre 2024
    • Agosto 2024
    • Luglio 2024
    • Giugno 2024
    • Maggio 2024
    • Aprile 2024
    • Marzo 2024
    • Febbraio 2024
    • Gennaio 2024
    • Dicembre 2023
    • Novembre 2023
    • Ottobre 2023
    • Settembre 2023
    • Agosto 2023
    • Giugno 2023
    • Maggio 2023
    • Aprile 2023
    • Marzo 2023
    • Febbraio 2023
    • Gennaio 2023
    • Dicembre 2022
    • Novembre 2022
    • Ottobre 2022
    • Settembre 2022
    • Agosto 2022
    • Giugno 2022
    • Maggio 2022
    • Aprile 2022
    • Marzo 2022
    • Febbraio 2022
    • Gennaio 2022
    • Novembre 2021
    • Ottobre 2021
    • Settembre 2021
    • Agosto 2021
    • Luglio 2021
    • Giugno 2021
    • Aprile 2021
    • Marzo 2021
    • Febbraio 2021
    • Gennaio 2021
    • Dicembre 2020
    • Novembre 2020
    • Ottobre 2020
    • Settembre 2020
    • Agosto 2020
    • Luglio 2020
    • Giugno 2020
    • Maggio 2020
    • Aprile 2020
    • Marzo 2020
    • Febbraio 2020
    • Gennaio 2020
    • Novembre 2019
    • Ottobre 2019
    • Settembre 2019
    • Agosto 2019
    • Luglio 2019
    • Giugno 2019
    • Aprile 2019
    • Marzo 2019
    • Febbraio 2019
    • Gennaio 2019
    • Dicembre 2018
    • Novembre 2018
    • Ottobre 2018
    • Agosto 2018
    • Giugno 2018
    • Maggio 2018
    • Marzo 2018
    • Febbraio 2018
    • Gennaio 2018
    • Dicembre 2017
    • Novembre 2017
    • Ottobre 2017
    • Settembre 2017
    • Agosto 2017
    • Luglio 2017
    • Giugno 2017
    • Maggio 2017
    • Aprile 2017
    • Marzo 2017
    • Febbraio 2017
    • Gennaio 2017
    • Dicembre 2016
    • Novembre 2016
    • Ottobre 2016
    • Settembre 2016
    • Agosto 2016
    • Luglio 2016
    • Giugno 2016
    • Maggio 2016
    • Aprile 2016
    • Marzo 2016
    • Febbraio 2016
    • Gennaio 2016
    • Dicembre 2015
    • Novembre 2015
    • Settembre 2015
    • Agosto 2015
    • Luglio 2015
    • Giugno 2015
    • Maggio 2015
    • Aprile 2015
    • Marzo 2015
    • Febbraio 2015
    • Gennaio 2015
    • Dicembre 2014
    • Novembre 2014
    • Ottobre 2014
    • Settembre 2014
    • Agosto 2014
    • Luglio 2014
    • Giugno 2014
    • Maggio 2014
    • Aprile 2014
    • Febbraio 2014
    • Gennaio 2014
    • Dicembre 2013
    • Novembre 2013
    • Ottobre 2013
    • Settembre 2013
    • Agosto 2013
    • Luglio 2013
    • Giugno 2013
    • Maggio 2013
    • Aprile 2013
    • Marzo 2013
    • Febbraio 2013
    • Gennaio 2013
    • Dicembre 2012
    • Novembre 2012
    • Ottobre 2012
    • Settembre 2012
    • Agosto 2012
    • Luglio 2012
    • Giugno 2012
    • Maggio 2012
    • Aprile 2012
    • Marzo 2012
    • Febbraio 2012
    • Gennaio 2012
    • Dicembre 2011
    • Novembre 2011
    • Ottobre 2011
    • Settembre 2011
    • Agosto 2011
    • Luglio 2011
    • Giugno 2011
    • Maggio 2011
    • Aprile 2011
    • Marzo 2011
    • Febbraio 2011
    • Gennaio 2011
    • Dicembre 2010
    • Novembre 2010
    • Ottobre 2010
    • Settembre 2010
    • Agosto 2010
    • Luglio 2010
    • Giugno 2010
    • Maggio 2010
    • Aprile 2010
    • Marzo 2010
    • Febbraio 2010
    • Gennaio 2010
    • Dicembre 2009
    • Novembre 2009
    • Ottobre 2009
    • Settembre 2009
    • Agosto 2009
    • Luglio 2009
    • Giugno 2009
    • Maggio 2009
    • Aprile 2009
    • Marzo 2009
    • Febbraio 2009
    • Gennaio 2009
    • Dicembre 2008
    • Novembre 2008
    • Ottobre 2008
    • Settembre 2008
    • Agosto 2008
    • Luglio 2008
    • Giugno 2008
    • Maggio 2008
    • Aprile 2008
    • Marzo 2008
    • Febbraio 2008
    • Gennaio 2008
    • Dicembre 2007
    • Novembre 2007
    • Ottobre 2007
    • Settembre 2007
    • Agosto 2007
    • Luglio 2007
    • Giugno 2007
    • Maggio 2007
    • Aprile 2007
    • Marzo 2007
    • Febbraio 2007
    • Gennaio 2007
    • Dicembre 2006
    • Novembre 2006
    • Ottobre 2006
    • Settembre 2006
    • Agosto 2006
    • Luglio 2006
    • Giugno 2006
    • Maggio 2006
    • Aprile 2006
    • Marzo 2006
    • Febbraio 2006
    • Gennaio 2006
    • Dicembre 2005
    • Novembre 2005

    Categories

    • Articoli in evidenza
    • New York
    • Anno in rassegna
    • Giochi
    • Imprenditorialità
    • Felicità
    • Discorsi
    • OLX
    • Giocare con gli unicorni
    • Laboratori FJ
    • Film e spettacoli televisivi
    • Interviste e chiacchierate al caminetto
    • Riflessioni personali
    • Videogiochi
    • Riflessioni sul mondo degli affari
    • Libri
    • Crittografia/Web3
    • L'economia
    • Mercati
    • Gadget tecnologici
    • Viaggi
    • Anno in rassegna
    • Ottimizzazione della vita
    • Laboratori FJ
    • Processo decisionale
    • L'economia
    • Asset Light Living
    • Riflessioni
    • Ottimismo e felicità
    • Cani

    Meta

    • Accedi
    • Feed dei contenuti
    • Feed dei commenti
    • WordPress.org
    • Home
    • Playing with Unicorns
    • Featured
    • Categories
    • Portfolio
    • About Me
    • Newsletter
    • Privacy Policy
    × Image Description

    Subscribe to Fabrice's Newsletter

    Tech Entrepreneurship, Economics, Life Philosophy and much more!

    Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

    >
    This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site. Switch to a production site key to remove this banner.