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I wonder why you are not still a startup millionaire ?


Well, they can automate all the answers with machine learning. That's not impossible.


Does anyone know what their motivation of buying it ? I'm pretty sure they could write this in a weekend in python.


I wish there was a K&R like book for every programming language.


I liked The Ruby Programming Language book because they attempted to do just that. K&R is a good model for books to follow.


Is it not a terrible name "Google Profiles" for facebook killer ?


Answering # of your questions, Are you sure the number is correct ? It's kind of unbelievable for a startup in beta.


That's what they claim. And what Brad said is correct. According to the CEO (who is also CEO of LCC) their software is much more granular than other search engines. For example, when they scour NYT, Twitter, Blogs, etc. they are able to create about 100 semantic tags for every 1 that most of their competition does. This is how they're able to create so many Q&A pairs. They also incorporate real time keyword search along with the Q&A pairs that they have, which is something that (AFAIK) isn't done by any other company.


it's sort of hard to classify swingly as a typical startup... it's more like a company incubated within a larger corporation.. they are licensing TONS of data from their parent company, which has been collecting this type of data for 10+ years or something like that


awesome list, thanks!.


Could you give me few examples for bot base packages ?


Congrats! How much ?


I'm amazed at the number of books you read in one year. Where do you get all the time ?


I read a lot in high school and college. After that, I continued to think of myself as reading a lot, but the reality slowly diverged from the self-image. A few years ago, I noticed the gap and decided to fix it. I realized that while I absolutely loved reading, and never needed to convince myself to read, the time I had to devote to it just kinda slipped through the cracks here and there.

What fixed it for me was promising myself I'd try to read at least 40 pages a day. The number itself isn't very important, but it roughly translates to one book a week. Books can be thicker and thinner of course; I don't consciously try to finish one every week, but I do consciously try to read 40 pages a day - and more than that is even better. It seemed like a tacky thing to do at first; if I love reading, would I really need to try and force myself to? But the point of the resolution is not to force yourself, it's to keep reading in the list of desired activities as you go through the day. It works to keep the thought closer to the foreground, as a kind of a mental hack. The other part of this "method", and it's absolutely essential, is not to "punish" yourself by assigning yourself the double dose if you fail to read at all one day. Keeping an account of "debts" this way is too forced and quickly leads to abandoning the whole idea. If I read just a little or not at all one day, for whatever reason, I just try to read 40 pages the next day.

Results: I read about 50 books in 2008 (didn't keep tabs). In 2009, I got a Sony Reader in May and switched to reading books mostly on the device. I read a bit over 80 books in 2009, and will probably read about a hundred this year. The time to do is mostly the time I would waste here and there on the net relatively meaninglessly (like checking my email, Google Reader, HN and reddit twice as often or something; with reading many books, I'm still able to do all that, and write a high-traffic blog, and work full-time). I also try to find little chunks of time here and there: I read in a cafe, in the lavatory, sometimes at lunch. I carry my ebook reader with me nearly all the time, and if someone's late to a meeting at work and everybody's waiting, I read for a few minutes; and so on.

TL;DR: Nah, just read it all :)


I am not trying to compete or brag but I read 22 books last year and just finished my first book this year (75% read before 1st Jan): http://dl.dropbox.com/u/578454/Screen%20shot%202010-01-01%20...

I am a slow reader and I do have quite a bit more free time than most people (I work from home). I read very slowly but I have patience to read over long period. This year I hope to read around 30 books, if things goes according to plan.

I used to be a serious reader, but last 10 years or so (before 2009) I was completely out of touch with books (besides academic reading). Thanks to this women (http://www.readallday.org/) I got inspired to read again.


I read ~40 books in 2009, so maybe I can answer this as well: my commute to the office is a 30 minute train ride - it certainly helps having an hour each day to sit down and read while getting to work (and beats the hell out of driving).


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