And, of course, for every good idea there's a flood of poorly
developed, poorly thought out, or just plain bad ideas out there.
Finding the one good idea among all the bad ones can be as difficult
as implementing it.

On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 5:49 PM, Frank Pittelli
<[email protected]> wrote:
> About the same as already happens.  I've been building start-up companies
> for my entire career and I can assure you that there is no shortage of
> clever ideas and even designs.  But, it takes a significant amount of
> effort, time and money to get even the simplest of these to the point where
> it can be useful by a large number of people or where it can be useful
> enough and marketable enough to make money.
>
> There's a reason why "engineers" occupy most of the top 10 highest paid job
> categories coming out of college.  Somebody has to turn ideas into reality
> ... and it's definitely not an easy or inexpensive process. Even in the
> virtual world of the software industry, it takes $1M and a couple years just
> to get a serious software product to the point where you can even think of
> turning a profit.  The real world is tougher still, requiring more money and
> time.
>
> The laws of physics and economics are not easily satisfied.
>
>        Frank P.
>
> On 2/18/2011 5:42 PM, Cobra wrote:
>>
>> It's true, how many great ideas would come to life if designs and
>> inventions were passed up the chain with greater ease.
>

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