Saturday, March 25, 2017

Best quote from the show 'This is us'

Episode 5: "I think I scared you before. All that talk of ghosts and... dying... all that adult stuff we were reading about. That's some pretty confusing adult stuff. So, uhh, I thought I'd come up here, show you my painting, tell you what I think my play's about because I was thinking that it might make us all feel a little bit better. But you've gotta promise not to make fun of me, OK? So, uhm... yeah, I painted this because I felt like the play was about life, you know, and life is full of color and we each get to come along and we add our own color to the painting, you know? And even though it's not very big - - the painting - - you sort of have to figure that it goes on forever, you know, in each direction? So, like, to infinity, you know. 'Cause that's kinda like life. It's really crazy, if you think about it, that a hundred years ago some guy that I never met came to this country with a suitcase. He has a son, who has a son, who has me. So at first when I was painting I was thinking, you know, maybe that was that guy's part of the painting and then down here that's my part of the painting. And then I started to think... well... what if we're all in the painting... everywhere? And what if we're in the painting before we're born? What if we're in it after we die? And these colors that we keep adding, they just keep getting added on top of one another, 'til eventually we're not even different colors anymore. We're just... one thing. One painting. My dad, he's not with us anymore. He's not alive... but he's with us. He's with me every day. It all just sort of fits somehow, even if you don't understand how yet. People will die in our lives - - people that we love. In the future. Maybe tomorrow. Maybe years from now. I mean, it's kind of beautiful, right, if you think about it, the fact that just because someone dies, just because you can't see them or talk to them anymore, it doesn't mean they're not still in the painting. I think maybe that's the point of the whole thing. There's no dying. There's no 'You' or 'Me' or 'Them.' It's just 'Us.' And this sloppy, wild, colorful, magical thing that has no beginning, has no end, it's right here. I think it's us."

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt6098130/trivia?tab=qt&ref_=tt_trv_qu

Sunday, March 19, 2017

Notes From: Brad Stone. “The Upstarts.” (Chp. 0-2)

February 15, 2017 

“See?” Camp said to Kalanick as the crowd chanted “O-bam-a! O-bam-a!” and the world waited for the new First Family to take the stage. “We really need this.”
Even back then, Camp was calling this proposed service by a name the world would soon know well: Uber.”


February 15, 2017 

“That was eight years ago.
Much has changed since then—the president, for starters. But few changes have been as profound as those that were ushered in by those two groups of entrepreneurs sitting anonymously in the crowd that day.”


February 15, 2017 

“Airbnb can be considered the biggest hotel company on the planet, yet it possesses no actual hotel rooms. Uber is among the world’s largest car services, yet it doesn’t employ any professional drivers or own any vehicles (save for a small, experimental fleet of self-driving cars). They are the ultimate twenty-first-century internet businesses, bringing not only new opportunities but new kinds of risks, often poorly understood, to those who provide and utilize their services.”


February 15, 2017 

“This idea was not necessarily novel (VRBO, HomeAway, Couchsurfing, and Craigslist did it first), but the elegance of the solution was unrivaled.”


March 6, 2017 

“During those eight years, the two companies etched their brands into popular culture. Their names are nouns and occasionally verbs, used by retirees looking to earn extra money, millennials seeking authentic travel experiences, and young people who have no interest in owning expensive assets like cars. Uber has become a staple of rap songs (Drake: “’Bout to call your ass a Uber, I got somewhere to be”) and late-night monologues (Jimmy Kimmel: “About a quarter of Uber drivers are over fifty and many are much older than that. I guess you could think of it like Miss Daisy driving you”).”


March 6, 2017 

“Then there was the monumental challenge of obtaining the cooperation of the famously combative Travis Kalanick, known as a contrarian who advocated fiercely for his company’s interests. He did not disappoint. “I came to this meeting out of respect for you and your work,” he said when we met for dinner in March 2015 at the Burritt Room and Tavern in San Francisco’s Mystic Hotel. “But I’m going into it thinking, There’s no way in hell I’m cooperating with a book about Uber right now.”
Kalanick had endured a year of negative press over Uber’s tactics toward rivals, its ambiguous impact on cities, and its tense relationship with drivers. David Plouffe, Obama’s former campaign manager and at the time Kalanick’s chief of media relations, came along for the dinner and wore the bemused smile of someone witnessing a journalist’s suicide mission.”


March 6, 2017 

“Surve, a native of Mumbai, India, had used the internet to rent an airbed for eighty dollars a night during the World Design Congress, a biennial conference held by the International Council of Societies of Industrial Design, or ICSID. All the hotels in the city that week were either booked or too expensive for Surve, so he hadn’t expected much. But what he saw in his temporary home was promising. There was a shelf full of design books and a comfortable couch in the living room. He was invited to help himself to cereal and milk in the kitchen in the morning, and there was a small bedroom with an inflated airbed, sheets, and blankets. His hosts were surprisingly thoughtful; Gebbia presented him with a small bag that contained, among other things, the house rules, a Wi-Fi passcode, a city map, and some loose change for the neighborhood homeless population.”


March 6, 2017 

“But by far the most surprising thing Surve saw that first afternoon was an image on Gebbia’s laptop—a picture of Amol Surve himself. Gebbia and his roommate and business partner, Brian Chesky, were putting together a presentation about their new home-sharing service for a pecha-kucha (Japanese for “chatter”), an event in which a series of designers present their new product ideas by showing twenty slides apiece and discussing each slide for twenty seconds.”


March 6, 2017 

“Chesky would later say that AirBed & Breakfast was a lark and something of a side project at the time, but Surve remembers his new friend vibrating with enthusiasm for the idea on the forty-five-minute drive back to the city. “Amol,” Chesky told him in the car, “we have to put a dent in the universe with this concept.”


March 6, 2017 

“From a young age, Chesky gravitated toward drawing, paying frequent visits to the Norman Rockwell Museum, about an hour’s drive from his town. His parents marveled at his ability to sit and draw for long periods, and teachers favorably compared his style to Rockwell’s and made heady predictions about his future. “Your son is going to be famous one day,” one told them.”


March 6, 2017 

“After graduation, Chesky spent a few months living at home, then he decamped to Los Angeles, moving in with former classmates in a Hollywood apartment amid the tourists and costumed panhandlers a few blocks from Grauman’s Chinese Theatre. His parents, still doting, bought a Honda Civic from an L.A. dealer and had it delivered to him at the Los Angeles airport.
He was living his college dream. He had a real job, earning forty thousand dollars a year as a designer for the consultant shop 3DID”


March 6, 2017 

“When you are a designer at school, especially an industrial designer, you just dream of getting something on the shelf,” Chesky says.”


March 6, 2017 

“one day in early September, Chesky woke with his mind made up. Walt Disney himself had taken a huge risk by moving from Kansas City to Hollywood in 1923, and his life had changed. Chesky would take a chance too.
Of course, by moving into Rausch Street, Chesky wasn’t solving the quandary of how to pay the rent. He still didn’t have meaningful employment, and both RISD graduates were, essentially, broke. So a few weeks later, on September 22, 2007, with the World Design Congress coming to San Francisco and the city’s hotels either overbooked or overpriced, Gebbia sent Chesky the e-mail that would change their lives:
Subject: subletter
Brian,
I thought of a way to make a few bucks—turning our place into a designer’s bed and breakfast—offering young designers who come into town a place to crash during the 4 day event, complete with wireless internet, a small desk space, sleeping mat, and breakfast each morning. Ha!—Joe.”


March 6, 2017 

“If you want to build a truly great company you have got to ride a really big wave. And you’ve got to be able to look at market waves and technology waves in a different way than other folks and see it happening sooner, know how to position yourself out there, prepare yourself, pick the right surfboard—in other words, bring the right management team in, build the right platform underneath you. Only then can you ride a truly great wave. At the end of the day, without that great wave, even if you are a great entrepreneur, you are not going to build a really great business.8”


March 6, 2017 

“There were several in-person meetings, but those fared just as poorly. One investor, a former Google executive, met Chesky and Gebbia at a café in Palo Alto, ordered a smoothie, and began to listen to the pitch. Then he walked out in the middle of it, his drink practically untouched. Gebbia and Chesky were left sitting there, wondering if the investor would return.”


March 6, 2017 

“All these investors had concerns about the size of the market, about the absence of any real users, and about the founders themselves, who didn’t resemble the wonky innovators who’d created great Silicon Valley companies, people like Mark Zuckerberg and Steve Jobs. Design students seemed risky; Stanford computer science dropouts were considered a much better bet. And, frankly, the idea itself seemed small. “We made the classic mistake that all investors make,” wrote Fred Wilson, a Twitter backer, a few years later. “We focused too much on what they were doing at the time and not enough on what they could do, would do, and did do”


March 6, 2017 

“For Chesky, the money must have been difficult to turn down. He says that at the time, he had never felt more like a failure. Among the co-founders, Blecharczyk had his personal projects, and Gebbia had CritBuns and work as a consultant. Chesky didn’t have anything except his old furniture designs and the fervent belief that a great wave of connectivity and sharing was gathering momentum and that people were ready for this strange brand of internet-facilitated intimacy.”


March 6, 2017 

“Silicon Valley’s startup scientists have a name for this phase in a company’s gestation; they call it the Trough of Sorrow, when the novelty of a new business idea wears off and the founders are left trying to jump-start an actual business. Gebbia and Chesky experienced a deep trough that would have swamped most founders. They responded in a characteristic way, digging back into their RISD past and tapping their penchant for reckless, silly creativity.
Talking over their dismal prospects one night in the Rausch Street kitchen during the presidential debates, they started riffing on the idea of making breakfast cereal and offering it to guests. It could be presidential-themed breakfast cereal! One could be called Obama O’s: “The breakfast of change!” And the other Cap’n McCains: “A maverick in every bite!”


March 6, 2017 

“The interview at Y Combinator’s offices in Mountain View was practically hostile. “People are actually doing this?” asked Paul Graham, the program’s legendary co-founder, when the three men described the home-sharing concept. “Why? What’s wrong with them?” Graham, then forty-four, later admitted that he didn’t get it. “I wouldn’t want to stay on anyone else’s sofa and I didn’t want anyone to stay on mine,” he says.”


March 6, 2017 

“You just won’t die.”16
Cockroach was Graham’s word for an unkillable startup that could weather any challenge, and it was the highest possible compliment in his startup lexicon. A few weeks later, after the founders had learned they had gotten into the program, and after they’d visited Washington, DC, for Barack Obama’s historic inauguration, they arrived at the offices of Y Combinator. Graham was there, speaking with Greg McAdoo, the Sequoia venture capitalist who had delivered that memorable speech about great waves the previous year.”


March 6, 2017 

“McAdoo and his partners had identified this kind of true grit as the most important attribute in the founders of their successful portfolio companies, like Google and PayPal.
Scouting for new opportunities despite the gathering economic storm enveloping the world, McAdoo asked Graham: “So, who in this class of startups is the most mentally, emotionally tough?”
“Well, that’s easy,” Paul Graham responded, and he pointed across the room at two designers and an engineer, all hunkered over their laptops. “Hands down, it’s those guys over there.”


March 6, 2017 

“Camp was born in Calgary, Canada. His mother was an interior designer and his father had left a career in accounting to train himself as an architect and contractor. The Camps were itinerant back in the 1980s; his father would build a house, his mother would decorate it, and then the family would move in for a few years before selling the house and starting over.
Camp spent his early childhood playing sports, learning the electric guitar, and asking lots of questions. The family didn’t have a television until he was fourteen, but they did see movies. He remembers that after the first Back to the Future, he needled his father ceaselessly about how nuclear fusion worked.
Eventually his curiosity settled on the geeky world of personal computers. An uncle gave the family an early model Macintosh, from the days of floppy disks and point-and-click adventure games, and Camp spent hours with it during the frigid winters, toying with early computer graphics and writing basic programs.
By the time Camp graduated from high school, his parents had nearly perfected their craft with a three-story home that included a comfortable office and a computer room in the basement[…]”


March 6, 2017 

“By the time Camp finished his degree in 2005, StumbleUpon was starting to show promise. Camp and Smith met an angel investor that year who convinced them to move to San Francisco and raise capital. They incorporated the company in the United States, and over the next year, the number of users on StumbleUpon grew from five hundred thousand to two million.
With the trauma of the first dot-com bust fading and the scent of opportunity again wafting across Silicon Valley, acquisition offers for StumbleUpon started pouring in. In May 2007, eBay bought StumbleUpon for seventy-five million, turning it into one of the early successes of what became known as Web 2.0, the movement in which companies like Flickr and Facebook mined the social connections among internet users.2 For Camp, it seemed at the time like the highest possible level of success in Silicon Valley, and it was, by any reasonable standard—until the one that he achieved next.
Camp continued to work at eBay after the sale, and he was now young, wealthy, and single, with a taste for getting out of the house more often. This is when he ran headlong into San Francisco’s[…]”


March 6, 2017 

“After the eBay acquisition, Garrett Camp splurged on a red Mercedes-Benz C-Class sports car, but the vehicle sat in the garage. He hadn’t driven much in Calgary—his parents hadn’t wanted to pay the extra auto insurance—and in college he preferred to take public transportation. “Driving in San Francisco was too stressful,” he says. “I didn’t want to park the car on the street and I didn’t want people to break into it. Just logistically, it was much harder to drive.”


March 6, 2017 

“So the city’s sad taxi situation put a serious crimp in Camp’s new lifestyle. Since he couldn’t reliably hail a cab on the street, he began putting the yellow-cab dispatch numbers in his phone’s speed-dial. Even that was frustrating. “I would call and they wouldn’t show up and while I was waiting on the street, two or three other cabs would go by,” he says. “Then I’d call them back and they wouldn’t even remember that I called before. I remember being late for first or second dates.”


March 6, 2017 

“Then Camp got a girlfriend.
A few months after eBay’s acquisition of StumbleUpon, he sent a message over Facebook to a smart, beautiful television producer named Melody McCloskey, and—after noting that they had a vague connection because they shared the blogger Om Malik as a friend on the social network—asked her out on a date.
McCloskey, who is now the founder and CEO of the online beauty and wellness company StyleSeat, recalls being wary, but she agreed to go for coffee. Camp suggested they meet at a restaurant at eight on a Friday night. She countered that a café at six p.m. on a Tuesday might be more appropriate. He offered seven o’clock on a Thursday night as a compromise and then changed the meeting location to a bar at the last minute.
McCloskey told herself she was going for only forty-five minutes. They stayed out until 2:00 a.m. “I accidentally went out with this person on this wild date,” McCloskey recalls years later. “I don’t think I made it into work the next day.”


March 6, 2017 

“The relationship posed a new set of transportation hurdles as well. McCloskey lived a few miles away from Camp, in Pacific Heights. Meeting anywhere was a hassle and Camp often wanted to get together somewhere out at night.
“The logistics of dating you are very hard,” she told him once. “I can’t afford to meet you all over the city. I can’t keep up with your lifestyle.”


March 6, 2017 

“Suddenly Camp was obsessed with a new notion. He frequently talked with McCloskey about the idea of an on-demand car service and vehicles that passengers could track via a map on their phones. At one point that year, Camp scrawled the word Über—with the umlaut over the U—into a Moleskine notebook that he kept to jot down new ideas and logos for companies and brands. “Isn’t that pronounced Yoober?” she asked him.
“I don’t care. It looks cool,” he said.
McCloskey recalls that Camp “wanted it to be one word and a description of excellence” and that his musings on the word, its sound and meaning, were incessant. “What an uber coffee that was,” he’d say randomly after drinking a cup. “It means great things! It means greatness!”


March 6, 2017 

“He talked it over that year with many of his friends. The author and investor Tim Ferriss first brainstormed with Camp about the then-unnamed Uber at a bar in the Mission District. He thought it was a great idea, then forgot all about it. A month or two later he got a call from Camp, and when they started talking about Uber again, Ferriss was shocked. Camp “had done an incredibly deep dive into the flaws of black cars and a kind of lost utility, the downtime of black cars and taxis,” he says. “It was clear that he was probably already in the top one percent of market analysts who have looked at the space.”
The idea behind Uber was crystallizing in Camp’s mind.”


March 6, 2017 

“At the end of the e-mail, Camp wrote to Ferriss, “My goal is to be at a go or no-go decision by December 1 and to be live with five cars in January.”
Camp does not recall getting much help from Ferriss’s assistant, but nevertheless he plunged ahead. In December, on the way to LeWeb, a high-profile annual technology conference in Paris, he stopped in New York City. There he met Oscar Salazar, a friend and fellow graduate student from the University of Calgary.
Salazar was a skilled engineer from Colima, Mexico, the son of an agronomist (a technician who worked on farms) and a kindergarten teacher.”


March 6, 2017 

“Uber’s own official story begins here in Paris, when Camp and Kalanick famously visited the Eiffel Tower on a night after LeWeb and, looking out over the City of Light, decided to take on an entrenched taxi industry that they felt was more interested in blocking competition than in serving customers.”


March 19, 2017 

“We actually came up with the idea at LeWeb in 2008,” Kalanick would say five years later at the same conference, citing the challenges of getting a cab in Paris. “We went back to San Francisco and we created a very simple, straightforward to us at the time, [way] to push a button and get a ride. We wanted it to be a classy ride.”3
Like all mythologies, it is not really true. “The story gets misrepresented a lot of times.” Camp sighs. “The whole LeWeb thing. I’m okay with it, as long as it’s directionally correct.”


March 19, 2017 

“McCloskey remembers one dinner at a fancy restaurant at Paris where the debate raged over the best way to run an on-demand network of town cars. The restaurant was elegant, with expensive wine, light music, and a sophisticated French clientele. Apparently there was also paper over the tablecloth because Camp and Kalanick spent the entire meal scrawling their estimates for things like fixed costs and maximum vehicle utility rates.”


March 19, 2017 

“On a separate night in Paris, the group went for drinks on the Champs-Élysées and then to an elegant late-night dinner that included wine and foie gras. At 2:00 a.m., somewhat intoxicated after a night of revelry, they hailed a cab on the street.
Apparently they were speaking too boisterously, because halfway through the ride home, the driver started yelling at them. McCloskey was sitting in the middle of the backseat, and, at five feet ten inches tall, she’d had to prop her high heels on the cushion between the two front seats. The driver cursed at them in French and threatened to kick them out of the car if they didn’t quiet down and if McCloskey didn’t move her feet. She spoke French and translated; Kalanick reacted furiously and suggested they get out of the car.”


March 19, 2017 

“Kalanick would brag a few years later, in one of our first interviews: “Garrett brought the classy and I brought the efficiency. We don’t own cars and we don’t hire drivers. We work with companies and individuals who do that. It’s very straightforward. I want to push a button and get a ride. That’s what it’s about.”


March 19, 2017 

“Graves completed a business-development internship at the location app Foursquare. He had tried to develop his own social app, with little success. Though he was technically in General Electric’s leadership training program, he wasn’t there a lot. “You can come in at ten a.m. and leave at four p.m. and no one knows,” he says. “I was putting in very little time at GE while getting a very high ranking.”
Kalanick was interested enough to meet with him, so Graves snuck out of a GE training class in Crotonville, New York, and drove an hour to New York City to meet Kalanick at a SoHo coffee shop. They talked for more than two hours and Kalanick showed Graves the prototype iPhone app.
Graves was intrigued. This was the opportunity to run something by himself. It was also a position working with some very connected Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and most likely would allow him to stick a foot in a much bigger door. Plus: “I don’t think there was anyone else competing for the job,” he says.”


March 19, 2017 

“Most of Silicon Valley’s best and brightest passed on the deal, just as they had with Airbnb. They said no because Ryan Graves wasn’t experienced enough or because the two founders weren’t involved enough or because they saw the concept as an extravagant indulgence for wealthy urbanites. Some said no because they had worked with the combative Travis Kalanick before at his previous companies and didn’t want to deal with the aggravation again; others because they knew the company was going to run headlong into a hostile tangle of city and state transportation laws.”


March 19, 2017 

“Investor Bill Gurley, a partner at Benchmark who would hitch his ride to the Uber rocket a year later and was watching the taxi market closely, took Kalanick and Graves out to dinner in early July to Absinthe, a restaurant in the Hayes Valley neighborhood of San Francisco. But Benchmark didn’t usually invest in seed deals and he couldn’t get his partners to make a commitment so early.”


March 19, 2017 

“Jason Calacanis, a blogger and founder of internet media startups, was friendly with Kalanick and invited him to pitch to a group of investors at his own event in San Francisco, the Open Angel Forum. Kalanick found a few willing backers there, including Calacanis himself, who for the next ten years would revisit his investment decision on various podcasts, in blogs, and on the Q-and-A website Quora.”


March 19, 2017 

“Even though they got lucky, some of the earliest Uber investors had to live with the fact that they could have been even luckier. Ravikant of AngelList planned to invest $100,000 but waited until the end of the fund-raising process to avoid the appearance that he was favoring certain AngelList deals over others.
When Ravikant finally made an offer, Graves said that he no longer had room in the round. Ravikant begged and eventually got to put in $25,000. It’s still by far the best investment he’s ever made (current value: over $100 million). “I don’t fixate on it,” Ravikant says. “I’ve made peace with the fact that Silicon Valley is so random. You have to make peace with it or otherwise you’ll never get a good night’s sleep in this town.”


March 19, 2017 

“With the wind now blowing softly at his back, Graves started to build his staff. Ryan McKillen, one of the new hires, attended Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, a year ahead of Graves and they had several friends in common. They had hung out earlier that year while Graves was in San Francisco without his wife. Then, fortuitously, as it turned out, the accounting startup where McKillen rather enjoyed working imploded. So Graves hired him. (Because the two men have the same first name, colleagues took to calling them by their initials, a practice at Uber that endures today.)
On his first day in the office, McKillen noted the table had piles of programming books in pristine condition and a well-worn Spanish/English dictionary. (The engineers had been trying to translate some of the instructions around the code written by Jose Uribe.) McKillen asked Conrad Whelan why the dictionary was there and later he would enjoy recalling Whelan’s response: “Well, Ryan, because the code is written in Spanish. Welcome to Uber.”


Notes From: Brad Stone. “The Upstarts.” iBooks. 


Check out this book on the iBooks Store: https://itun.es/dk/8nACdb.l

Saturday, March 18, 2017

Notes From: Ray Kroc with Robert Anderson. “Grinding It Out.” (Chp 1-4)

February 13, 2017 

“Though the business history of McDonald’s is fascinating in and of itself, it is only one facet of Grinding It Out. For the practices pioneered or perfected by McDonald’s under Ray Kroc’s leadership have revolutionized an entire food service industry, changed eating habits throughout the world, and raised customer expectations. Who among us is not now less tolerant of slow service, overpriced meals, soggy french fries, or a lack of cleanliness in eating places?”


February 13, 2017 

“I have always believed that each man makes his own happiness and is responsible for his own problems. It is a simple philosophy. I think it must have been passed along to me in the peasant bones of my Bohemian ancestors. But I like it because it works, and I find that it functions as well for me now that I am a multimillionaire as it did when I was selling paper cups ”


February 13, 2017 

“ After seventeen years of selling paper cups for Lily Tulip Cup Company and climbing to the top of the organization’s sales ladder, I saw opportunity appear in the form of an ugly, six-spindled milk shake machine called a Multimixer, and I grabbed it. It wasn’t easy to give up security and a well-paying job to strike out on my own. My wife was shocked and incredulous. But my success soon calmed her fears, and I plunged gleefully into my campaign to sell a Multimixer to every drug store soda fountain and dairy bar in the nation.”


February 13, 2017 

“One day it would be a restaurant owner in Portland, Oregon; the next day a soda fountain operator in Yuma, Arizona; the following week, a dairy-bar manager in Washington, D.C. In essence, the message was always the same, “I want one of those mixers of yours like the McDonald brothers have in San Bernardino, California.” I got curiouser and curiouser. Who were these McDonald brothers, and why were customers picking up on the Multimixer from them when I had similar machines in lots of places? ”


February 13, 2017 

“I flew out to Los Angeles one day and made some routine calls with my representative there. Then, bright and early the next morning, I drove the sixty miles east to San Bernardino. I cruised past the McDonald’s location about 10 A.M., and I was not terrifically impressed. There was a smallish octagonal building, a very humble sort of structure situated on a corner lot about 200 feet square. It was a typical, ordinary-looking drive-in.”


February 13, 2017 

“Say, what’s the attraction here?” I asked a swarthy man in a seersucker suit who was just in front of me.
“Never eaten here before?” he asked.
“Nope.”
“Well, you’ll see,” he promised. “You’ll get the best hamburger you ever ate for fifteen cents. And you don’t have to wait and mess around tipping waitresses.”
I left the line and walked around behind the building, where several men were hunkered down in the shade baseball-catcher style, resting their backs against the wall and gnawing away on hamburgers. ”


February 13, 2017 

“It was a hot day, but I noticed that there were no flies swarming around the place. The men in the white suits were keeping everything neat and clean as they worked. That impressed the hell out of me, because I’ve always been impatient with poor housekeeping, especially in restaurants. I observed that even the parking lot was being kept free of litter.”


February 13, 2017 

“I don’t remember whether I ate a hamburger for lunch that day or not. I went back to my car and waited around until about 2:30 in the afternoon, when the crowd dwindled down to just an occasional customer. Then I went over to the building and introduced myself to Mac and Dick McDonald. They were delighted to see me (“Mr. Multimixer” they called me), and I warmed up to them immediately. We made a date to get together for dinner that evening so they could tell me all about their operation.”




February 13, 2017 

“After dinner, the brothers took me over to visit their architect, who was just completing work on the design of a new drive-in building for them. It was neat. ”


February 13, 2017 

“What made the new building unique was a set of arches that went right through the roof. There was a tall sign out front with arches that had neon tubes lighting the underside. I could see plenty of problems there. The arches of the sign looked like they would topple over in a strong wind, and those neon lights would need constant attention to keep them from fading out and looking tacky. But I liked the basic idea of the arches and most of the other features of the design, too.”


February 26, 2017 

“But I paid particular attention to the french-fry operation. The brothers had indicated this was one of the key elements in their sales success, and they’d described the process. But I had to see for myself how it worked. There had to be a secret something to make french fries that good.”


February 26, 2017 

“After the lunch-hour rush had abated, I got together with Mac and Dick McDonald again. My enthusiasm for their operation was genuine, and I hoped it would be infectious and rally them in favor of the plan I had mapped out in my mind.
“I’ve been in the kitchens of a lot of restaurants and drive-ins selling Multimixers around the country,” I told them, “and I have never seen anything to equal the potential of this place of yours. Why don’t you open a series of units like this? It would be a gold mine for you and for me, too, because every one would boost my Multimixer sales. What d’you say?”


February 26, 2017 

“See that big white house with the wide front porch?” he asked. “That’s our home and we love it. We sit out on the porch in the evenings and watch the sunset and look down on our place here. It’s peaceful. We don’t need any more problems. We are in a position to enjoy life now, and that’s just what we intend to do.”


February 26, 2017 

“It’ll be a lot of trouble,” Dick McDonald objected. “Who could we get to open them for us?”
I sat there feeling a sense of certitude begin to envelope me. Then I leaned forward and said, “Well, what about me?”


February 26, 2017 

“When I flew back to Chicago that fateful day in 1954, I had a freshly signed contract with the McDonald brothers in my briefcase. I was a battle-scarred veteran of the business wars, but I was still eager to go into action. I was 52 years old. I had diabetes and incipient arthritis. I had lost my gall bladder and most of my thyroid gland in earlier campaigns.”


February 26, 2017 

“I was born in Oak Park, just west of Chicago’s city limits, in 1902. My father, Louis Kroc, was a Western Union man. He had gone to work for the company when he was twelve years old and slowly but steadily worked his way up. He had left school in the eighth grade, and he was determined that I would finish high school. I was the wrong kid for that. My brother, Bob, who was born five years after me, and my sister, Lorraine, who came along three years after him, were much more inclined to studies. In fact, Bob became a professor, a medical researcher, and we had almost nothing in common, he and I. For many years we found it difficult even to talk to each other.”


February 26, 2017 

“I was never much of a reader when I was a boy. Books bored me. I liked action. But I spent a lot of time thinking about things. I’d imagine all kinds of situations and how I would handle them.
“What are you doing Raymond?” my mother would ask.
“Nothing. Just thinking.”
“Daydreaming you mean,” she’d say. “Danny Dreamer is at it again.”


March 2, 2017 

“ There is an old saying that all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. I never believed it because, for me, work was play. I got as much pleasure out of it as I did from playing baseball”


March 2, 2017 

“began to feel about school the way I had felt earlier about the Boy Scouts. It was simply too slow for me. I’d been eager to become a Boy Scout, and I enjoyed it for a while. They made me the bugler. But a bugle is a very limited instrument, and I found myself doing the same things over and over in meetings. It was small potatoes. I wasn’t progressing, so I said to hell with it. School was the same—full of aggravations and little progress.”


March 5, 2017 

“As school ended that spring, the United States entered World War I. I took a job selling coffee beans and novelties door-to-door. I was confident I could make my way in the world and saw no reason to return to school. Besides, the war effort was more important. Everyone was singing “Over There.” And that’s where I wanted to be. My parents objected strenuously, but I finally talked them into letting me join up as a Red Cross ambulance driver. I had to lie about my age, of course, but even my grandmother could accept that. In my company, which assembled in Connecticut for training, was another fellow who had lied about his age to get in. He was regarded as a strange duck, because whenever we had time off and went out on the town to chase girls, he stayed in camp drawing pictures. His name was Walt Disney.”


March 5, 2017 

“I said, Raymond, that it is not possible for you to get married. You must first have a steady job. And I don’t mean working as an errand boy or a bellhop in a hotel. I mean something substantial.”
A few days later I went to work selling Lily brand paper cups. I don’t know what appealed to me so much about paper cups. Perhaps it was mostly because they were so innovative and upbeat. But I sensed from the outset that paper cups were part of the way America was headed. I guess my father must have agreed. At least he raised no further objections, and Ethel and I were married.”


March 6, 2017 

“My daughter, Marilyn, was born in October 1924, and having this additional responsibility made me work even harder. That winter was a particularly tough one for the paper cup business. Everything slowed down except for the hospital and medical clinic sales, and I didn’t have any of those places for customers. I didn’t do very well, because I thought of the customer first. I didn’t try to force an order on a soda fountain operator when I could see that his business had fallen off because of cold weather and he didn’t need the damn cups.”


March 6, 2017 

“My philosophy was one of helping my customer, and if I couldn’t sell him by helping him improve his own sales, I felt I wasn’t doing my job. I collected my salary of thirty-five dollars a week just the same”


March 6, 2017 

“In the spring of 1925 I began to hit my stride as a salesman. There was a German restaurant called Walter Powers on the south side of Chicago. The manager was a Prussian martinet named Bittner. He always listened politely to my sales pitch, but he always, just as politely, said “Nein, danke,” and dismissed me. One day when I called on the place I saw a gleaming Marmon automobile parked at the rear entrance. I was looking it over admiringly when a man came out of the restaurant and approached me.
“Do you like that car?” he asked.
“Yes sir!” I replied. “Say, you’re Mr. Powers, aren’t you?”
He said he was and I told him, “Mr. Powers, if I could aspire to own a car like this, you could have the Rock Island and heaven, too.”
We chatted for some time about automobiles. I told him that I had ridden in the rumble seat on the outside of a Stutz Bearcat, and he agreed that had to be one of life’s finer experiences. After thirty minutes or so of shooting the breeze, he asked me who I represented and I told him.
“Are we giving you any business[…]”


March 6, 2017 

“Ethel and I stored our furniture, cranked up the Model T, and headed south on the old Dixie Highway. It was a memorable trip. I had five new tires when we left Chicago. When we arrived in Miami, not one of those originals was left on the car.”


March 6, 2017 

“America had become an ice cream society in the last years of the twenties, thanks in large part to Prohibition. Bars and fine lounges in hotels sold ice cream, because they could no longer sell liquor, and dairy bars began to crop up all over the country. It was an incredible era.”


March 6, 2017 

“My father was one of the large losers in the economic collapse. After he had given up his position in New York in 1923 and returned to Chicago, taking a demotion to please my mother, he began working out his frustrations by speculating in real estate. That was probably the fastest-building bubble in the whole inflation-bloated country. Newspapers and magazines in the late twenties were full of advertisements for correspondence courses that were guaranteed to help you get rich quick in real estate. My father didn’t need to take any of those courses. He owned property scattered all over northeastern Illinois. I remember that he bought a corner lot on Madison Street in Oak Park one month and sold it to an automobile dealership the following month at a handsome profit. The real astonisher, however, was a lot he bought in Berwyn for $6,000 and sold a short time later for $18,000!”


March 6, 2017 

“In 1930 I made a sale that not only gave Lily Tulip Cup Company a big boost in volume but also gave me an insight into a new direction for paper cup distribution. I was selling our little pleated “souffle” cups to the Walgreen Drug Company, a Chicago firm that was just starting a period of tremendous expansion. They used these cups for serving sauces at their soda fountains. Observing the traffic at these soda fountains at noon, I perceived what I considered to be a golden opportunity. If they had our new Lily Tulip cups, they could sell malts and soft drinks “to go” to the overflow crowds. The Walgreen headquarters was at Forty-third Street and Bowen Avenue at that time, and there was a company drugstore just down the street. I presented my pitch to the food service man, a chap named McNamarra. He shook his head and threw up his hands at my suggestion.
“You’re crazy, or else you think I am,” he protested. “I get the same fifteen cents for a malted if it’s drunk at the counter, so why the hell should I pay a cent and a half for your cup and[…]”


March 6, 2017 

“however many you need to try this for a month in your store down the street. Now most of your takeout customers will be Walgreen employees from headquarters here, and you can conduct your own marketing survey on them and see how they like it. You get the cups free, so it’s not going to cost you anything to try it.”


March 6, 2017 

“One day an order was sent down from Lily Tulip’s headquarters in New York that because of the depression everyone was obliged to take a ten percent pay cut. In addition, because prices had dropped on gas, oil, and tires, all car allowances would be cut from fifty dollars a month to thirty dollars.
I was then sales manager and John Clark called me into his office to give me the news.
“Close the door, Ray, I want to talk privately with you,” he said. Then he told me how much he appreciated my hard work, how well the company thought of my production, but I would have to take a salary and expense cut. It applied to everyone, across the board.
This was a real blow. It wasn’t the reduction in salary that bothered me, but the affront to my ego. How could they treat the best salesman they had in this arbitrary fashion? I knew how much money I was making for them, depression or not, and I felt cold fury rising in me.”


March 6, 2017 

“I felt trapped. I hated being put on the defensive. I walked away, but she kept after me like the determined Scot she was, telling me to answer her. So I whirled around and let her have it.
“I can’t take those cheapskates down there any more,” I blurted. “I’m quittin’!”
Zingo! Her jaw dropped. Her eyes widened. Then she really lit into me. I was betraying her and our daughter. My pride was jeopardizing our existence. She stormed on about my foolishness, how desperate times were, how difficult it was for anyone to find a job (I knew that!). But I had taken my stand. I wasn’t going to back down, regardless. I couldn’t. Everything in me resisted it.
“Ethel, honey,” I said soothingly, “don’t worry. I’ll find something. We’ll get by. I’ll go back to playing the piano if I have to.”


March 6, 2017 

“It got to the point in the office that I was generating too much business, too much paperwork, to be handled by the clerical pool, so Mr. Clark told me I should hire a secretary.
“I suppose you’re right,” I said. “But I want a male secretary.”
“You what?”
“I want a man. He might cost a little more at first, but if he’s any good at all, I’ll have him doing a lot of sales work in addition to administrative things. I have nothing against having a pretty girl around, but the job I have in mind would be much better handled by a man.”


March 6, 2017 

“I took care not to be ostentatious (I detest snobs), but my style kind of dazzled my staff at the office. They were eager to follow my examples. I stressed the importance of making a good appearance, wearing a nicely pressed suit, well-polished shoes, hair combed, and nails cleaned. “Look sharp and act sharp,” I told them. “The first thing you have to sell is yourself. When you do that, it will be easy to sell paper cups.” I also counseled them on handling money, encouraging them to spend wisely and save some for a rainy day.”


Notes From: Ray Kroc with Robert Anderson. “Grinding It Out.” iBooks. 


Check out this book on the iBooks Store: https://itun.es/dk/zFCBcb.l

Sunday, March 12, 2017

Notes From: Don Tapscott and Alex Tapscott. “Blockchain Revolution.” (1/11)

March 12, 2017 

“Overall, the Internet has enabled many positive changes—for those with access to it—but it has serious limitations for business and economic activity. The New Yorker could rerun Peter Steiner’s 1993 cartoon of one dog talking to another without revision: “On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.” Online, we still can’t reliably establish one another’s identities or trust one another to transact and exchange money without validation from a third party like a bank or a government. These same intermediaries collect our data and invade our privacy for commercial gain and national security. ”


March 12, 2017 

“Moore’s law of the annual doubling of processing power doubles the power of fraudsters and thieves—“Moore’s Outlaws”1—not to mention spammers, identity thieves, phishers, spies, zombie farmers, hackers, cyberbullies, and datanappers—criminals who unleash ransomware to hold data hostage—the list goes on.”


March 12, 2017 

“As early as 1981, inventors were attempting to solve the Internet’s problems of privacy, security, and inclusion with cryptography. No matter how they reengineered the process, there were always leaks because third parties were involved. Paying with credit cards over the Internet was insecure because users had to divulge too much personal data, and the transaction fees were too high for small payments.”


March 12, 2017 

“In 1993, a brilliant mathematician named David Chaum came up with eCash, a digital payment system that was “a technically perfect product which made it possible to safely and anonymously pay over the Internet …. It was perfectly suited to sending electronic pennies, nickels, and dimes over the Internet.”


March 12, 2017 

“Doing business on the Internet requires a leap of faith. Because the infrastructure lacks the much-needed security, we often have little choice but to treat the middlemen as if they were deities.”


March 12, 2017 

“This protocol is the foundation of a growing number of global distributed ledgers called blockchains—of which the bitcoin blockchain is the largest. While the technology is complicated and the word blockchain isn’t exactly sonorous, the main idea is simple. Blockchains enable us to send money directly and safely from me to you, without going through a bank, a credit card company, or PayPal”


March 12, 2017 

“At its most basic, it is an open source code: anyone can download it for free, run it, and use it to develop new tools for managing transactions online. As such, it holds the potential for unleashing countless new applications and as yet unrealized capabilities that have the potential to transform many things.”


March 12, 2017 

“the most important and far-reaching blockchains are based on Satoshi’s bitcoin model. Here’s how they work.”
“... leverages the resources of a large peer-to-peer bitcoin network to verify and approve each bitcoin transaction. Each blockchain, like the one that uses bitcoin, is distributed: it runs on computers provided by volunteers around the world; there is no central database to hack. ”


March 12, 2017 

“blockchain is encrypted: it uses heavy-duty encryption involving public and private keys (rather like the two-key system to access a safety deposit box) to maintain virtual security. You needn’t worry about the weak firewalls of Target or Home Depot or a thieving staffer of Morgan Stanley or the U.S. federal government”


March 12, 2017 

“Every ten minutes, like the heartbeat of the bitcoin network, all the transactions conducted are verified, cleared, and stored in a block which is linked to the preceding block, thereby creating a chain”


March 12, 2017 

“This structure permanently time-stamps and stores exchanges of value, preventing anyone from altering the ledger. If you wanted to steal a bitcoin, you’d have to rewrite the coin’s entire history on the blockchain in broad daylight. ”


March 12, 2017 

“Some scholars have argued that the invention of double-entry bookkeeping enabled the rise of capitalism and the nation-state. This new digital ledger of economic transactions can be programmed to record virtually everything of value and importance to humankind: birth and death certificates, marriage licenses, deeds and titles of ownership, educational degrees, financial accounts, medical procedures, insurance claims, votes, provenance of food, and anything else that can be expressed in code.”


March 12, 2017 

“This Internet of Everything needs a Ledger of Everything. Business, commerce, and the economy need a Digital Reckoning.”


March 12, 2017 

“We believe the truth can set us free and distributed trust will profoundly affect people in all walks of life.”


March 12, 2017 

“Ben Lawsky quit his job as the superintendent of financial services for New York State to build an advisory company in this space. He told us, “In five to ten years, the financial system may be unrecognizable … and I want to be part of the change.”


March 12, 2017 

“Bankers love the idea of secure, frictionless, and instant transactions, but some flinch at the idea of openness, decentralization, and new forms of currency”


March 12, 2017 

“To them, blockchains are more reliable databases than what they already have, databases that enable key stakeholders—buyers, sellers, custodians, and regulators—to keep shared, indelible records, thereby reducing cost, mitigating settlement risk, and eliminating central points of failure.”


March 12, 2017 

“We’re quite confident,” said Marc Andreessen in an interview with The Washington Post, “that when we’re sitting here in 20 years, we’ll be talking about [blockchain technology] the way we talk about the Internet today”


March 12, 2017 

“Regulators have also snapped to attention, establishing task forces to explore what kind of legislation, if any, makes sense. Authoritarian governments like Russia’s have banned or severely limited the use of bitcoin, as have democratic states that should know better, like Argentina, given its history of currency crises. ”


March 12, 2017 

“Carolyn Wilkins, the senior deputy governor of the Bank of Canada, believes it’s time for central banks everywhere to seriously study the implications of moving entire national currency systems to digital money. The Bank of England’s top economist, Andrew Haldane, has proposed a national digital currency for the United Kingdom.10”


March 12, 2017 

“How do we get from porn and Ponzi schemes to prosperity? To begin, it’s not bitcoin, the still speculative asset, that should interest you, unless you’re a trader.”


March 12, 2017 

“Globally, CEOs and government officials continue to be the least credible information sources,”


March 12, 2017 

“American confidence in institutions that “business” ranked second lowest among the fifteen institutions measured; fewer than 20 percent of respondents indicated they had considerable or high levels of trust. Only the U.S. Congress had a lower score.”


March 12, 2017 

“If an object, whether it be a sensor on a communications tower, a light bulb, or a heart monitor, is not trusted to perform well or pay for services it will be rejected” “The ledger itself is the foundation of trust."


March 12, 2017 

“ In our view, companies that conduct some or all of their transactions on the blockchain will enjoy a trust bump in share price. Shareholders and citizens will come to expect all publicly traded firms and taxpayer-funded organizations to run their treasuries, at minimum, on the blockchain. ”


March 12, 2017 

“Some of this has come to pass. There have been mass collaborations like Wikipedia, Linux, and Galaxy Zoo. Outsourcing and networked business models have enabled people in the developing world to participate in the global economy better. Today two billion people collaborate as peers socially. We all have access to information in unprecedented ways”


March 12, 2017 

“economic power has gotten spikier, more concentrated, and more entrenched. Rather than data being more widely and democratically distributed, it is being hoarded and exploited by fewer entities that often use it to control more and acquire more power. If you accumulate data and the power that comes with it, you can further fortify your position by producing proprietary knowledge. This privilege trumps merit, regardless of its origin.”


March 12, 2017 

“While they create great value for consumers, one upshot is that data is becoming a new asset class—one that may trump previous asset classes. Another is the undermining of our traditional concepts of privacy and the autonomy of the individual.”


March 12, 2017 

“Rather than trying to solve the problem of growing social inequality through the redistribution of wealth only, we can start to change the way wealth is distributed—how it is created in the first place, ”


March 12, 2017 

“In the early days of the Internet, Tom Peters wrote, “You are your projects.”19 He meant that our corporate affiliations and job titles no longer defined us. What is equally true now: “You are your data.” Trouble is, Moreira said, “That identity is now yours, but the data that comes from its interaction in the world is owned by someone else.”20 That’s how most corporations and institutions view you, by your data contrail across the Internet. They aggregate your data into a virtual representation of you, and they provide this “virtual you” with extraordinary new benefits beyond your parents’ happiest dreams.21 But convenience comes with a price: privacy. Those who say “privacy is dead—get over it” are wrong.22 Privacy is the foundation of free societies.”


March 12, 2017 

“Joe Lubin, CEO of Consensus Systems, refers to this concept as a “persistent digital ID and persona” on a blockchain. “I show a different aspect of myself to my college friends compared to when I am speaking at the Chicago Fed,” he said. “In the online digital economy, I will represent my various aspects and interact in that world from the platform of different personas.” Lubin expects to have a “canonical persona,” ”


March 12, 2017 

“Your black box may include information such as a government-issued ID, Social Security number, medical information, service accounts, financial accounts, diplomas, practice licenses, birth certificate, various other credentials, and information so personal you don’t want to reveal it but do want to monetize its value, such as sexual preference or medical condition, for a poll or a research study. You could license these data for specific purposes to specific entities for specific periods of time. You could send a subset of your attributes to your eye doctor and a different subset to the hedge fund that you would like to invest in. Your avatar could answer yes-no questions without disclosing who you are: “Are you twenty-one years or older? Did you earn more than $100,000 in each of the last three years? Do you have a body mass index in the normal range?”


March 12, 2017 

“In the physical world, your reputation is local—your local shopkeeper, your employer, your friends at a dinner party all have a certain opinion about you. In the digital economy, the reputations of various ”


March 12, 2017 

“personas in your avatar will be portable. Portability will help bring people everywhere into the digital economy. People with a digital wallet and avatar in Africa could establish the reputation required to, say, borrow money to start a business. “See, all these people know me and have vouched for me. I am financially trustworthy. I am an enfranchised citizen of the global digital economy.”


March 12, 2017 

“If we try to record all these into the blockchain, an immutable ledger, we lose not only the nuance of social interaction but also the gift of forgetting. People ought never be defined by their worst day.”


March 12, 2017 

“Pundits often refer to Airbnb, Uber, Lyft, TaskRabbit, and others as platforms for the “sharing economy.” It’s a nice notion—that peers create and share in value. But these businesses have little to do with sharing. In fact, they are successful precisely because they do not share—they aggregate. It is an aggregating economy.”


March 12, 2017 

“ Now with blockchains, the technology exists to reinvent these industries again. Today’s big disrupters are about to get disrupted.”


March 12, 2017 

“Whereas most technologies tend to automate workers on the periphery doing menial tasks, blockchains automate away the center. Instead of putting the taxi driver out of a job, blockchain puts Uber out of a job and lets the taxi drivers work with the customer directly.”2”


March 12, 2017 

“Even when connected to the old Internet, billions of people are excluded from the economy for the simple reason that financial institutions don’t provide services like banking to them because they would be unprofitable and risky customers. With the blockchain these people can not only become connected, but more important become included in financial activity, able to purchase, borrow, sell, and otherwise have a chance at building a prosperous life”


March 12, 2017 

“The technology holds great promise to revolutionize the industry for the good—from banks to stock exchanges, insurance companies to accounting firms, brokerages, microlenders, credit card networks, real estate agents, and everything in between. When everyone shares the same distributed ledger, settlements don’t take days, they occur instantly for all to see. Billions will benefit, and this shift could liberate and empower entrepreneurs everywhere.”


March 12, 2017 

“a majority of the world’s property holders can have their homes or their bit of land seized arbitrarily by corrupt government functionaries, with the flick of a software ”


March 12, 2017 

“Without proof of property ownership, landowners can’t secure a loan, get a building permit, or sell the property and they can be expropriated—all serious impediments to prosperity.”


March 12, 2017 

“The central idea to blockchain is that the rights to goods can be transacted, whether they be financial, hard assets or ideas. The goal is not merely to record the plot of land but rather to record the rights involved so that the rights holder cannot be violated”


March 12, 2017 

“Blockchain is for a world that’s governed by real things instead of fictitious things. And I think that’s good,”30 said de Soto. And it’s decentralized. No central authority controls it, everybody knows what’s happening, and it remembers forever.”


March 12, 2017 

“Abra and other companies are building payment networks using the blockchain. Abra’s goal is to turn every one of its users into a teller. The whole process—from the funds leaving one country to their arriving in another—takes an hour rather than a week and costs 2 percent versus 7 percent or higher. Abra wants its payment network to outnumber all physical ATMs in the world. It took Western Union 150 years to get to 500,000 agents worldwide. Abra will have that many tellers in its first year.”


March 12, 2017 

“The global community donated more than $500 million to the Red Cross, a known brand. An after-action investigation revealed that funds were misspent or went missing altogether.”


March 12, 2017 

“The blockchain can improve the delivery of foreign aid by eliminating the middlemen who take the aid before it reaches its destination. Second, as an immutable ledger of the flow of funds, blockchain holds institutions more accountable for their actions. Imagine if you could track each dollar you gave to the Red Cross from its starting point on your smart phone to the person it benefited. You could park your funds in escrow, releasing amounts after the Red Cross reached each milestone.”


Notes From: Don Tapscott and Alex Tapscott. “Blockchain Revolution.” iBooks. 


Check out this book on the iBooks Store: https://itun.es/dk/Aoc4bb.l