CS students and other Racketeers planning to do a startup... You're
probably familiar with what Paul Graham, of Y Combinator fame, has said
about the merits of using Lisp (ahem, Racket) for the initial system.
And sometimes you can also use Racket for the eventual system. So,
you're considering using Racket for your startup, right?
My day job is money-grubbing, fancy-pants technical consultant to
established organizations. But if you'd like to use Racket for your
startup, I'm up to being a technical advisor to a couple early cash-poor
startups, on an equity-only basis. You'll of course need to assemble
your founders team with the key competencies for your business -- an
advisor is just there in the background, to help your team grow in the
right directions, and to quietly back you up on occasion. Your founders
team will also need to be doing all the standard business-side things,
with the help of business advisers and perhaps an accelerator program,
and to be driving the startup with your own vision and wholehearted effort.
I'm based in Boston, and often work online.
Neil V.
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