The Musing Mill

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Events in 1956 relevent to today

240px-time_man_of_the_year_1957hunagarianfreedom_fighter.jpegToday is the 50th anniversary of the Hungarian Uprising in 1956. It is this event that caused my parents to leave Hungary and come to the US. I’m lucky that they did. Time magazine’s Man of the Year for 1956 was the Hungarian Freedom Fighter. My father led a troop of 32 people during the uprising. I have found 2 good websites memorializing the event. They are;

Site with downloadable book
and
Hungary1956.com (photos)

It lasted just several days until the Soviet army returned with tanks and reinforcements and brutally crushed the revolt. The uprising is historically significant in that it was the first successful overthrow of a Soviet occupied state, and led to the revolution in Poland. It showed just how weak the Soviet hold on it’s states were. Ultimately, this revealed weakness directly contributed to the fall of the Soviet empire.

56parade.jpegFor a while it looked like the Hungarians would win and the Soviets would stay out. It is a fact of history that a second-rate diplomat named Yuri Andropov was the ambassador to Hungary in 1956, and he was the one who suggested re-occupying Hungary to Kruschev (the Soviet leader at the time).

This event ultimately catapulted Andropov to be the head of the Kremlin. He was not a leader cut our for such a position, and the Soviet union collapsed in part due to his leadership in the early 1980’s. In fact, most experts agreee that without Andropov’s support, Gorbachev would not have succeeded him as head of the Kremlin. You can read about him here;

Wikipedia on Yuri Andropov

Given the situations today in the mideast, I think our world leaders could benefit from paying attention to the phrase “Do not forget history, unless you want to re-live it.”

Final word on Google…

Google cairoGood news - Google hired me and is putting me in the Cairo office.

(Just Kidding - I had to figure out a way to use that picture)

No - Google has declined further interviews, and it’s a good thing since I now have to concentrate on Solo Structures. But I just can’t help it. I’ve been researching Google since February and I keep finding more interesting stuff. For instance, do a Google search on “Marissa Mayer” and then click the Wikipedia link.

One that page you’ll find a link to a presentation she gave at Stanford this May. It’s a great insight into Google. Listening to it rewound me back to working with Leonid and the brilliant Russian (well, mostly Russian) engineers on Revit and the early days of the startup. I agree with their “formula.” Launch it rough around the edges and polish it QUICKLY as your most vocal early-adopter users complain.

Marissa is set to present at Harvard with Carl Bass (CEO of Autodesk) in November. BTW, I hope Marissa has a thick skin, since this article made me split my sides laughing.

Ups and downs of a startup

headache.jpeg

As many of you know I’ve been working on a startup for about a year now, and it’s been a struggle with financing.

Most of the angst is self-inflicted, since we are trying to raise all the funds privately and not through VCs. So to those of you thinking about starting a business I give this advice;

Never underestimate how hard it will be to get people to part with their money.

Really. Leonid and Irwin were able to do it fairly easily with Revit because of the climate at the time and their incredible track record of success. I think it clouded my expectations.

For the length of this summer it’s been hard to tell whether the Solo business will survive. People have asked, why don’t you take it to a VC, but the controlling interests in the business don’t want to. So, it’s not my choice.

I was very close to pronouncing it dead this weekend when I had not heard from architect of the deal in almost a week. We would normally talk several times a week so this was really unusual. So to those of you thinking about starting a business I give this advice;

Don’t ever panic

I finally got him on the phone yesterday only to find out that things are all set and he was just busy trying to get stuff out of the way so he can focus on this once funded. It figures. Anyway, it’s a good idea to keep more than one option open, thus the interviewing you see sprinkled here.