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Archive for November 2008

Some Corrections on Ireland 2.0

with 3 comments

Just wanted to clear up some Misquotes in today’s Silicon Republic Article “Ireland 2.0“.

  • I didn’t found Generics Software, that was the first Irish Startup I worked for after leaving College. Generics was founded by Han Jurgens Kugler and Michaeal Mac An Airchinnigh
  • I think Ireland should focus on creating companies with exit valuations in the 10m range not sales in the 10m range

Otherwise a great article.

Written by Joe

November 27, 2008 at 8:29 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Your Economic Crash Starter Pack

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Everything you need to know about the current economic crash, all in one place.

For starters read “Liar’s Poker” by Michael Lewis. The tag line is “Two Cities, True Greed” and in it he tracks the rise of Salomon Brothers, the investment bank that invented and popularised the securitisation of home owners mortgages. These are the financial tools that we used to create the subprime crisis.

Need take a look at “When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long Term Capital Management“. Which documents how the LTCM hedge nearly brought about the collapse of the investment banking system in 1998. Interesting fact, the top Salomon trader in Liar’s Poker is John Meriwether, who went on to found Long Term Capital Management.

Now for a lickety split overview of the current sub prime crisis watch this.

 

Then for a deeper understanding of how banks make money out of nothing. This one is long, but worth. You’ll never look at a bank again without thinking about the term “fiat currency”.

 

 

http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docid=-9050474362583451279&hl=en&fs=true

 

Finally to wrap it all up with a bow, read Michael Lewis’s article on Portfolio.com, “The End of Wall Street’s Boom“. In the interview he talks to an analyst who predicted the whole crash.

Written by Joe

November 26, 2008 at 10:32 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

Venture Capital in Crisis

with 6 comments

We have the good fortune to have Brian Caulfield on the board at PutPlace.com. At a board meeting yesterday Brian gave a chilling analysis of the state of VC across the globe. Afterwards he sent me a bunch of links supporting his analysis.

In short whatever problems you have raising money for your startup, the VCs are seeing those problems double.

VC’s raise money from what are called Limited Partners (LPs). When a VC announces the closure of a round what they have actually got is a commitment from the LPs to provide funds to support investments over the 10 year lifetime of a typical VC fund.

As the VC makes investments they make cash calls on the LPs to support those investments (Enterprise Ireland’s 175m is still sitting in a government account somewhere, even though most of it has been committed) so throughout the lifetime of a fund the LPs continue to feed cash into the fund.

Most LPs are in fact pension funds and those funds are experiencing the same smack upside the head that the rest of the financial system is still reeling from.  So they have asset pools that have halved in value and as a result they have no liquidity to meet the cash calls of the VCs they have invested in.

This is resulting in a VC double whammy (and by extension companies looking for VC money). The first problem is that LPs are writing off their existing investments in VCs and trying to withdraw from any future commitments to the fund. Legal issues abound here and we can potentially expect to see some LPs  sued for this behaviour.

The second problem is that LPs who are honouring their commitments are approaching VCs en mass and saying “don’t make any investments as we won’t be able to meet your cash calls for the next while”.

The net effect of both these issues is the same, VC money is drying up faster than Sahara rain drops.

So, raise as much as you can, at whatever price you can, plan to have at least 12 months cash in the bank and get to break even ASAP.

http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/11/the-cash-panic-sweeping-the-vc-industry

http://venturebeat.com/2008/11/07/cash-panic-sweeping-vc-industry-the-capital-calls-problem/

http://www.pehub.com/22812/lps-are-on-the-ropes/

Written by Joe

November 12, 2008 at 10:17 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

The Cascades – Ennistimon, Co Clare, Ireland

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Shot this video on the 26-Oct-08 after several days of rain, pretty spectacular for a small town in the West of Ireland. Especially as this is right in the Centre of Ennistimon.

Written by Joe

November 11, 2008 at 12:54 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Survey to improve Enterprise Ireland Web site

with one comment

This was posted as a comment to a previous post on the subject of the EI web site.

New comment on your post #710 “Ten Ways to Improve the Enterprise Ireland Web Site”
Author : PathPacific.com (IP:
213.79.48.76 , dsl-48-76.dsl.netsource.ie)
E-mail :
solutions@pathpacific.com
URL    : http://www.pathpacific.com
Whois  : http://ws.arin.net/cgi-bin/whois.pl?queryinput=213.79.48.76
Comment:
Please help Enterprise Ireland improve their Websites
Enterprise Ireland are carrying out a major review of all their websites.  Please help them improve by taking this short 5-minute survey.   Your feedback will have a direct impact on how Enterprise Ireland should improve their online web service for You.
Engage by clicking on the link below (Survey Monkey)
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=445v5TdRpfDaCX3fk_2bVcqA_3d_3d

Its a pretty short survey, but the first question is a stinker. As my final comment on the survey I asked this question,

How come EI is still using SurveyMonkey for surveys when we have an excellent indigenous product in the shape of PollDaddy?

Written by Joe

November 10, 2008 at 5:17 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

Amazon Web Services: The PutPlace Way

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PutPlace is an avid user of Amazon web services applications. Yesterday, in London, we got an opportunity to talk about how we use Amazon here at PutPlace.

Key takeaways for me from listening to the other speakers were,

  • Using Amazon doesn’t insulate you from failures
  • Lots of people using S3 and EC2, not so many on SimpleDB and SQS
  • The per-transaction fees can really start to hurt if you start to get traction
  • SimpleDB is a cool place to store your grid topology dynamically especially if you use another provider alongside Amazon
  • EC2 nodes come up really quickly compared to other grid providers
  • Lots of people use Nagios with EC2 for monitoring

The Amazon guys (Simone and Adam with a later appearance by Werner) gave strong hints that we would see all the following features in 2009,

  • EC2 hosting in Europe
  • An Amazon supported Content Distribution Network
  • Integrated Load balancing and Monitoring

Written by Joe

November 5, 2008 at 4:12 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

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