I do not think there is a lack of ideas not a lack of execution capabilities. The problem is that the more interesting projects require a critical mass of users to start. Think about this... you walk by a restaurant and it is empty. It does not matter how good the restaurant look and how attractive the menu looks. If it is empty you do not go in.
Same with software project. You need to buy your critical mass of users. The more ambitious, the larger the critical mass. If you start too small and takes too long to grow, please will copy your project. Buying users cost money. Companies buy each other mostly because they want to buy theirs clients, not the technologies or the ideas. The want to sell their own ideas and technologies to the clients of the acquired company. Massimo On Dec 3, 2:20 pm, Branko Vukelic <[email protected]> wrote: > I think it's the same with designers, actually, and they are > _expected_ to be creative. But once you're in the industry, so little > of it is actually demanded. > > On Fri, Dec 3, 2010 at 6:54 PM, Jason Brower <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Personally, I see the other way. So many programmers, so little creativity. > > > On Thu, 2010-12-02 at 19:14 -0800, mdipierro wrote: > > >http://www.cs.uni.edu/~wallingf/blog/archives/monthly/2010-12.html#e2... > > -- > Branko Vukelić > > [email protected] > [email protected] > > Check out my blog:http://www.brankovukelic.com/ > Check out my portfolio:http://www.flickr.com/photos/foxbunny/ > Registered Linux user #438078 (http://counter.li.org/) > I hang out on identi.ca:http://identi.ca/foxbunny > > Gimp Brushmakers Guildhttp://bit.ly/gbg-group

