Learning the business of innovation: Stanford hosts sold out Startup School weekend
By Tom Foremski - April 28, 2006
Palo Alto - 600 people from countries as far away as Brazil and Japan will converge at Stanford University Saturday for Startup School 2006, a conference featuring a dozen tech industry movers and shakers such as Caterina Fake of Flickr fame and Joshua Schachter of social bookmarking site, del.icio.us.
No, attendees won’t learn how to build next generation Web 2.0 websites with PHP, Python or Ruby on Rails. Instead, they’re coming to receive a one-day crash course in how to build a successful technology business.
For those lucky enough to nab a ticket to the invitation-only conference, Startup School 2006 will offer attendees a rare chance to hear first-hand war stories from the successful pioneers behind some of the biggest technology trends shaping the industry today.
Y Combinator [http://ycombinator.com], a venture firm based in Cambridge and Mountain View, organized the event in association with Stanford’s BASES [http://bases.stanford.edu/site/index.jsp] organization.
"Startup School is the only event of its kind to serve next generation founders of technology companies," Jessica Livingston, a partner at Y Combinator, said. "Most attendees have computer science and engineering backgrounds. This conference exposes them to the business side of startups, and it’s the business side that can often seem mysterious."
If you want to attend the event but you don’t have an invitation, you’re not alone. Nearly three hundred applicants were turned away due to space limitations. But don’t fret. Podcasts and PowerPoints from the conference will be archived online at http://startupschool.org/ early next week.
As you wait for the new presentations to come online, check out the Podcast archives from last year’s Startup School 2005, held in October at Harvard University, at http://startupschool.infogami.com/Presentations . Speakers included Steve Wozniak of Apple, Langley Steinert of TripAdvisor, Stephen Wolfram of Mathematica and numerous other tech veterans.
Editor’s note: Mark Coker will be on hand to cover the event for Silicon Valley Watcher.
« The Next Big Thing... | Main | Guest Column: Who shouldn't blog in the PR industry? »
April 28, 2006 | Permalink | Comment | Category: Silicon Valley | Subscribe to SVW
- Top Stories:
- Tech Awards For Benefiting Humanity
- The Death Of The Search Algorithm? Techmeme Has Six Editors
- TEDxSF - Little TED Just Like The Big TED
- SNCR Research: Social Media IS Influencing Business Decisions
- What's Next? Beyond Real-Time...
- PearlTrees: A Novel Approach To Human Mapping Of The Internet
- MediaWatch Analysis Part II: Google Has More To Lose Than Murdoch
- MediaWatch Analysis: Murdoch Will Negotiate Payment For Access To Basket Of Content With GOOG et al
- WeekendWatcher: The Sheer Number Of Things Will Devalue Them
- ChipWatch - Where Will The Next Generation Of Engineers Come From?
- Public Healthcare Could Cut Startup Costs And Help Spur Innovation
- Is GOOG's $750m AdMob Buy Strategic Or Dumb? An alternate view...
Comments (2)
Great writeup Mark. Look foward to seeing you on the farm tomorrow.
Posted: April 28, 2006 7:04 PM
Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders
"The DFJ Entrepreneurial Thought Leaders Seminar (ETL) is a weekly seminar series on entrepreneurship, co-sponsored by BASES (a student entrepreneurship group), Stanford Technology Ventures Program, and the Department of Management Science and Engineering."
http://edcorner.stanford.edu/podcasting.shtml
Posted: April 29, 2006 5:38 AM