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There are plenty of these. Most universities have a course for this. Lots of the online platforms too. Here's a free resource: https://startupclass.samaltman.com/. - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
Stanford university: How to start a startup? - The course is 20 videos, some with a speaker or two and some with a small panel. It is around 1,000 minutes of content if you watch it all. The course covers how to come up with ideas and evaluate them, how to get users and grow, how to do sales and marketing, how to hire, how to raise money, company culture, operations and management, business strategy, and more. Source: about 1 year ago
You can do it. Go for it. Just be ready to do what everyone else isn’t willing to do by working hard consistently to that goal. Are you familiar with GAAP? Typically that’s something you cover in Acct 1&2 in a business course and unless you want to end up bankrupt waiting 10 years for that to come off your personal record then you’ll need to seriously consider hiring professionals. I’ve made those mistakes and... Source: over 1 year ago
Try watching the How to Start a Startup videos based on a Stanford class: https://startupclass.samaltman.com/. Source: over 2 years ago
Don't listen to them. What you are doing is very anti-polarisation. In a polarised society, you will have a lot of disbelievers in you. Don't listen to them. To make any convincing argument, you have to put it through the scrutiny of multiple arguments in all sides. Climate deniers are not climate deniers because they run away from truth, they are because they think they found THE truth. If their arguments can be... Source: over 1 year ago
Kialo.com is better for real debate. There you could cite your study, and people could discuss why it does-or-doesn't apply to this-or-that population, and any name-calling, or maligning someone's attitude, would be deleted with explanation and invitation to rephrase. Source: over 1 year ago
Should check out https://kialo.com . Best site for forming a healthy debate. Source: almost 2 years ago
I read it and it looks like they studied r/TheRedPill, r/DatingAdvice, r/Atheism, and r/TheDonald, but I don't see where it suggests the results might apply to subreddits such as r/religion or other discussion platforms such as kialo.com. Also, they only seem to have found a small bias in the more neutral subreddit r/DatingAdvice. Source: almost 3 years ago
And about your second suggesting: Yes, I also had something like in mind – and in fact, there is kialo.com already doing it! Source: almost 3 years ago
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