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Add You - Techno Gypsies - Freemasons Of The Third Millennia?
Residential Construction Estimating Software For Contractors ution. Failures are many among start-up companies.Operating construction jobs is a great deal of work, not just in terms of using a level or nail gun. Managing those construction duties is just as time consuming and sometimes aggravating. Small and medium sized contractors have a need for the most help, which will definitely benefit the use of construction estimating software. While there are many software packages used for estimating residential and commercial construction options, they can sometimes be a hassle to use, since the feature an over abundance in customization which is hard to catch onto, or they are so simple they do not cover all the needs of a busy construction office.Keeping track of the estimates and cost is vital to operating a residential construction business, which means keeping the books straight while being hard pressed for the correct totals. Not doing so, will leave you with lint in your pockets while the business is penny pinched for needs of materials that have not been assessed properly, this can all be done away with while using a Construction estimating residential software package. A contractor will get nowhere committing to expenses without the foreknowledge of them, and that is never a good thing. The success of a business falls to ke Crafting bits and bytes is truly different from working in stone. Stone works such as the Venus de Milo endure with lasting admiration and appeal. To date no one has suggested elevating old software in the same manner. Like the commissioned artist, the Techno Gypsies have to work on three fronts: first, developing new skills; second, on their current project, and; third, looking for their next meal. Initially the IT techies believed they would stay for protracted terms at whatever enterprise they were working for. Some still do. The advent of rapid changes in hardware and software, increased storage capacity and faster and faster processing times created obsolescence as quickly as it created opportunity. In modern times the patrons of the Techno Gypsies are the established business enterprises along with the venture capitalists that facilitate the growth of new technologies and companies. Particularly in the start-up segment, people try to commercialize the next ‘best thing.’ A significant number of these new ventures fail; for a variety of reasons. The venture capitalists and the founders of these new ventures absorb the financial losses while the Techno Gypsies move on to a new patron, where they can apply the skills honed at the last job to a new one. In no other modern enterprise is such freedom with respect to the transfer of intellectual property tolerated. This movement has created a Gypsy-like motion among techies. Many now think in terms of projects rather than jobs; expecting them to last a measured number of weeks instead of months and years. As they continue to build and expand the information infrastructure, it is reasonable to contemplate on organized group emerging among the Techno Gypsies within the n Business - Did You Understand That? Today skilled programmers, installers and operators in information technology routinely change jobs as skill sets ascend, peak and wane in the face of new capabilities in technology. These Techno Gypsies move from start-up, to existing enterprise to start-up, all as demand for their skills shifts and changes. Like technology, their skills are in a constant state of growth as they master the challenges of increasing processing speed, storage capacity and the demand for ever increasing information.There are times in the corporate world where we may get frustrated with our boss. They may even say things we may agree with, but sometimes they won’t even make sense.The following statements are from memos or emails from some well known national and international businesses. The names of the businesses have been removed to avoid any unintentional embarrassment.As of tomorrow, employees will only be able to access the building using individual security cards. Pictures will be taken next Wednesday and employees will receive their cards in two weeks.What I need is a list of specific unknown problems we will encounter.How long is this Beta guy going to keep testing our stuff?E-mail is not to be used to pass on information or data. It should be used only for company business.This project is so important, we can't let things that are more important interfere with it.Quote from the boss: "Teamwork is a lot of people doing what 'I' say."My sister passed away and her funeral was scheduled for Monday. When I told my boss, he said she died so that I would have to miss work on the busiest day of the year. He then asked if we could change her burial to Friday. He said, "That would b As the builders of the great information edifices of our age, they bear an uncanny resemblance to the freemasons of the thirteenth and succeeding centuries. The term freemason came to refer to working masons as early as 1325 who were permitted to move from town to town at a time when the feudal system bound most peasants to the land. As used in this article the term freemason, refers to the operational Stone Masons and their guilds, not the Speculative Intellectual Freemasonry which continues to this day. Recognizing the unbridled need for these skilled artisans, the rulers allowed their free movement at a time when maintaining control and power depended upon keeping the peasants tied to the land. What caused these conservative rulers to risk allowing free movement and other privileges to the stone masons? The freemasons possessed the skills necessary to create the palaces, cathedrals, battlements, and castles, along with the requisite sculpted works and ornaments. In this regard the freemasons were both artisans and artists. In a time of rampant illiteracy at all levels of society, these skills must have seemed almost magical. As the late medieval transitioned into the Renaissance period the Stone Masons were the elite of the work force. In many instances the occupational Stone masons were exempted from taxation or regulation by the king or (later) local municipalities. Free indeed! Unlike the other existing crafts and guilds the freemasons routinely collected in large groups to work on the large building projects of the day. The other trades tended to be solitary, competing for a local market in jealously guarded territories. The freemasons regularly moved upon the completion of one castle, battlement or cathedral on to the next great project. As they spread from this project to the next, experience and knowledge were shared and developed. While at a site, the freemasons regularly set up a common tent for mutual protection. As the works of the era tended to consume years, tents inevitably gave way to stronger lodging. In time, the term lodge came to describe freemasons in a particular locality. Freemasons were semi-nomadic. Projects lasted years, occasionally decades. At the end of a project the assembled masons generally moved on to other great works. Skilled artisans, the freemasons were4 dependent upon the sponsors of the great work, patrons if you will, for funding and livelihood. The initial sources were limited: either the nobility or the Church. As the Renaissance dawned a new class began to acquire wealth and with it, power. Successful merchants families such as the Medici’s began to commission the Stone Masons to build their ornate houses. This new class became the leader in patronage of the arts. Two main systems of patronage existed in Renaissance Italy. A wealthy person could take an artist into his household and in return the artist would supply the patron’s artistic needs. In the second, a patron (whether an individual or an organization,) would commission a single work from an artist and employ him only until it was completed. Only a few works were complicated or large enough to require years of labor. Accordingly, commission artists were always working on three fronts: first on their artistry; second, on the current patron’s assignment, and; third, looking for their next meal. As the Renaissance progressed, artists were universally dependent upon patrons for their very sustenance. Lucky indeed were the few artists who had a single patron such as the Borgia’s, Medici’s or, a Pope. For the rest of the artists there evolved a system of patronage networks. Florence, perhaps, had the greatest of these. At the dawn of the information age at the end of the second millennium, a new class of artists and artisans appeared. This group includes programmers and IT techs of every manner handling hard and software. Like their forbearers they began the massive works of the third millennium, the information edifices. The more things change the more they stay the same. The skill sets of the Techno Gypsies appear magical to the tech illiterate. With the exception of a Babbage or a few other visionaries, no one was computer literate until well into the twentieth century. These early literati had the demeanor and secrecy of high priests as they served room sized machines that would be unable to compete with today’s palm sized Blackberry’s. Just as the Stone Mason’s abilities to build larger, stronger edifices grew with experience, so the skills and ranks of the techies grew. The jealously guarded monster machines grew smaller and able to do more. The strangle hold of the mainframe was broken. Now the demand for skilled help rose to new levels. No longer was the limited (but still better than everyone else’s,) knowledge of the mainframe jockeys enough. As tech evolved the demand for professional grew with it. Computer techs spread from the confines of the Fortune 500 to virtually every business in the U.S. In today’s corporate setting the Techno Gypsies are the only group of employees who move freely and frequently between jobs. It is not unusual for some of them to think of job length in terms of weeks rather than the years other employees are expected to spend before moving. Corporate leaders and the venture capitalists that fund new companies use a starkly different mobility standard for Techno Gypsies than any other group of employees. The modern need for ever increasing information and the rapidly evolving technologies have enabled the Techno Gypsies complete freedom of movement. The reasons for the patronage of the Renaissance: prestige-pleasure-piety drifted significantly to today’s reasons: profit and information control. While the driving motivators have changed, similarity exists in the outlook of today’s patrons. The ‘A’ list being comprised of large enterprises with ongoing IT needs. These are the long term patrons. The alternative is to work for one of the smaller enterprises with immediate, but short work duration, needs, or take a risk with a start-up. The start-ups have a certain cachet and appeal as each of them, theoretically, has the potential of becoming a major player and large enterprise- if they develop and market reliable, innovative products with staying power. This is becoming increasingly difficult to do- unless the founders of the start-up can develop a truly upsetting technology surpassing existing capabilities. The kernel of thought behind many start-ups is the desire to solve an isolated problem. By the time they get a solution to market, if they ever do, others have already worked out a patch or the newer versions of software eclipse the need for their solution. Failures are many among start-up companies. Crafting bits and bytes is truly different from working in stone. Stone works such as the Venus de Milo endure with lasting admiration and appeal. To date no one has suggested elevating old software in the same manner. Like the commissioned artist, the Techno Gypsies have to work on three fronts: first, developing new skills; second, on their current project, and; third, looking for their next meal. Initially the IT techies believed they would stay for protracted terms at whatever enterprise they were working for. Some still do. The advent of rapid changes in hardware and software, increased storage capacity and faster and faster processing times created obsolescence as quickly as it created opportunity. In modern times the patrons of the Techno Gypsies are the established business enterprises along with the venture capitalists that facilitate the growth of new technologies and companies. Particularly in the start-up segment, people try to commercialize the next ‘best thing.’ A significant number of these new ventures fail; for a variety of reasons. The venture capitalists and the founders of these new ventures absorb the financial losses while the Techno Gypsies move on to a new patron, where they can apply the skills honed at the last job to a new one. In no other modern enterprise is such freedom with respect to the transfer of intellectual property tolerated. This movement has created a Gypsy-like motion among techies. Many now think in terms of projects rather than jobs; expecting them to last a measured number of weeks instead of months and years. As they continue to build and expand the information infrastructure, it is reasonable to contemplate on organized group emerging among the Techno Gypsies within the ne Tips for Brightening Up a Bland Workspace were exempted from taxation or regulation by the king or (later) local municipalities. Free indeed!Whether you're in a spacious corner office or a cramped cubicle, sometimes a workspace can seem bland and uninspiring. From a neutral palette to cookie-cutter furniture, many offices -- particularly those not open to the public or to clients -- are designed for function over form.The good news is that there are easy ways to brighten any office space. With a few simple touches, you can create a better environment in which to spend your 9 to 5.- Color can play an important role in mood and productivity. Bland office spaces filled with shades of beige and gray, though low on distraction, are often mood dampeners. So why not add some pops of color to your office or cubicle?Buy a great, brightly-colored calendar. Nature calendars are idea. Pages filled with birds, butterflies, and blooms can perk up any workspace.Treat yourself to flowers. Gerbera daisies in bright orange, raspberry, and red are perfect mood lifters, and inexpensive carnations can last for weeks with the right care. Keep a vase ready at the office for when the mood strikes. Plus, flowers have the added benefit of smelling wonderful.- Add personality. Sure you can use pencils from the supply cabinet, but for a small pric Unlike the other existing crafts and guilds the freemasons routinely collected in large groups to work on the large building projects of the day. The other trades tended to be solitary, competing for a local market in jealously guarded territories. The freemasons regularly moved upon the completion of one castle, battlement or cathedral on to the next great project. As they spread from this project to the next, experience and knowledge were shared and developed. While at a site, the freemasons regularly set up a common tent for mutual protection. As the works of the era tended to consume years, tents inevitably gave way to stronger lodging. In time, the term lodge came to describe freemasons in a particular locality. Freemasons were semi-nomadic. Projects lasted years, occasionally decades. At the end of a project the assembled masons generally moved on to other great works. Skilled artisans, the freemasons were4 dependent upon the sponsors of the great work, patrons if you will, for funding and livelihood. The initial sources were limited: either the nobility or the Church. As the Renaissance dawned a new class began to acquire wealth and with it, power. Successful merchants families such as the Medici’s began to commission the Stone Masons to build their ornate houses. This new class became the leader in patronage of the arts. Two main systems of patronage existed in Renaissance Italy. A wealthy person could take an artist into his household and in return the artist would supply the patron’s artistic needs. In the second, a patron (whether an individual or an organization,) would commission a single work from an artist and employ him only until it was completed. Only a few works were complicated or large enough to require years of labor. Accordingly, commission artists were always working on three fronts: first on their artistry; second, on the current patron’s assignment, and; third, looking for their next meal. As the Renaissance progressed, artists were universally dependent upon patrons for their very sustenance. Lucky indeed were the few artists who had a single patron such as the Borgia’s, Medici’s or, a Pope. For the rest of the artists there evolved a system of patronage networks. Florence, perhaps, had the greatest of these. At the dawn of the information age at the end of the second millennium, a new class of artists and artisans appeared. This group includes programmers and IT techs of every manner handling hard and software. Like their forbearers they began the massive works of the third millennium, the information edifices. The more things change the more they stay the same. The skill sets of the Techno Gypsies appear magical to the tech illiterate. With the exception of a Babbage or a few other visionaries, no one was computer literate until well into the twentieth century. These early literati had the demeanor and secrecy of high priests as they served room sized machines that would be unable to compete with today’s palm sized Blackberry’s. Just as the Stone Mason’s abilities to build larger, stronger edifices grew with experience, so the skills and ranks of the techies grew. The jealously guarded monster machines grew smaller and able to do more. The strangle hold of the mainframe was broken. Now the demand for skilled help rose to new levels. No longer was the limited (but still better than everyone else’s,) knowledge of the mainframe jockeys enough. As tech evolved the demand for professional grew with it. Computer techs spread from the confines of the Fortune 500 to virtually every business in the U.S. In today’s corporate setting the Techno Gypsies are the only group of employees who move freely and frequently between jobs. It is not unusual for some of them to think of job length in terms of weeks rather than the years other employees are expected to spend before moving. Corporate leaders and the venture capitalists that fund new companies use a starkly different mobility standard for Techno Gypsies than any other group of employees. The modern need for ever increasing information and the rapidly evolving technologies have enabled the Techno Gypsies complete freedom of movement. The reasons for the patronage of the Renaissance: prestige-pleasure-piety drifted significantly to today’s reasons: profit and information control. While the driving motivators have changed, similarity exists in the outlook of today’s patrons. The ‘A’ list being comprised of large enterprises with ongoing IT needs. These are the long term patrons. The alternative is to work for one of the smaller enterprises with immediate, but short work duration, needs, or take a risk with a start-up. The start-ups have a certain cachet and appeal as each of them, theoretically, has the potential of becoming a major player and large enterprise- if they develop and market reliable, innovative products with staying power. This is becoming increasingly difficult to do- unless the founders of the start-up can develop a truly upsetting technology surpassing existing capabilities. The kernel of thought behind many start-ups is the desire to solve an isolated problem. By the time they get a solution to market, if they ever do, others have already worked out a patch or the newer versions of software eclipse the need for their solution. Failures are many among start-up companies. Crafting bits and bytes is truly different from working in stone. Stone works such as the Venus de Milo endure with lasting admiration and appeal. To date no one has suggested elevating old software in the same manner. Like the commissioned artist, the Techno Gypsies have to work on three fronts: first, developing new skills; second, on their current project, and; third, looking for their next meal. Initially the IT techies believed they would stay for protracted terms at whatever enterprise they were working for. Some still do. The advent of rapid changes in hardware and software, increased storage capacity and faster and faster processing times created obsolescence as quickly as it created opportunity. In modern times the patrons of the Techno Gypsies are the established business enterprises along with the venture capitalists that facilitate the growth of new technologies and companies. Particularly in the start-up segment, people try to commercialize the next ‘best thing.’ A significant number of these new ventures fail; for a variety of reasons. The venture capitalists and the founders of these new ventures absorb the financial losses while the Techno Gypsies move on to a new patron, where they can apply the skills honed at the last job to a new one. In no other modern enterprise is such freedom with respect to the transfer of intellectual property tolerated. This movement has created a Gypsy-like motion among techies. Many now think in terms of projects rather than jobs; expecting them to last a measured number of weeks instead of months and years. As they continue to build and expand the information infrastructure, it is reasonable to contemplate on organized group emerging among the Techno Gypsies within the n Registered Office - Your Key to Credibility p>Only a few works were complicated or large enough to require years of labor. Accordingly, commission artists were always working on three fronts: first on their artistry; second, on the current patron’s assignment, and; third, looking for their next meal.A great and easy way to lend credibility to your company, your products and your services is by having your own registered office. Things have become convenient for businessmen, businesswomen and merchants in UK, who want registered offices. Now they can also get online services which would help them attain their registered office, and also they can benefit the ease of doing it online.A registered office is nothing but the company address that has been registered with the Companies Registry. The company records are usually maintained with reference to this address. This implies that this address is printed on the company letterhead and other means of company correspondence. This address is quoted for any kind of official communication and legal obligations. Also this registered office is displayed on the products of the company. This is also mandatory as per Companies Act 1985.Registered office works wonders for the goodwill and public image of your company. The most important thing is that your company would have a reliability factor. Your customers would not be in two minds while dealing with your company. It is also a great promotional measure as this may fetch more business for you.It is not ne As the Renaissance progressed, artists were universally dependent upon patrons for their very sustenance. Lucky indeed were the few artists who had a single patron such as the Borgia’s, Medici’s or, a Pope. For the rest of the artists there evolved a system of patronage networks. Florence, perhaps, had the greatest of these. At the dawn of the information age at the end of the second millennium, a new class of artists and artisans appeared. This group includes programmers and IT techs of every manner handling hard and software. Like their forbearers they began the massive works of the third millennium, the information edifices. The more things change the more they stay the same. The skill sets of the Techno Gypsies appear magical to the tech illiterate. With the exception of a Babbage or a few other visionaries, no one was computer literate until well into the twentieth century. These early literati had the demeanor and secrecy of high priests as they served room sized machines that would be unable to compete with today’s palm sized Blackberry’s. Just as the Stone Mason’s abilities to build larger, stronger edifices grew with experience, so the skills and ranks of the techies grew. The jealously guarded monster machines grew smaller and able to do more. The strangle hold of the mainframe was broken. Now the demand for skilled help rose to new levels. No longer was the limited (but still better than everyone else’s,) knowledge of the mainframe jockeys enough. As tech evolved the demand for professional grew with it. Computer techs spread from the confines of the Fortune 500 to virtually every business in the U.S. In today’s corporate setting the Techno Gypsies are the only group of employees who move freely and frequently between jobs. It is not unusual for some of them to think of job length in terms of weeks rather than the years other employees are expected to spend before moving. Corporate leaders and the venture capitalists that fund new companies use a starkly different mobility standard for Techno Gypsies than any other group of employees. The modern need for ever increasing information and the rapidly evolving technologies have enabled the Techno Gypsies complete freedom of movement. The reasons for the patronage of the Renaissance: prestige-pleasure-piety drifted significantly to today’s reasons: profit and information control. While the driving motivators have changed, similarity exists in the outlook of today’s patrons. The ‘A’ list being comprised of large enterprises with ongoing IT needs. These are the long term patrons. The alternative is to work for one of the smaller enterprises with immediate, but short work duration, needs, or take a risk with a start-up. The start-ups have a certain cachet and appeal as each of them, theoretically, has the potential of becoming a major player and large enterprise- if they develop and market reliable, innovative products with staying power. This is becoming increasingly difficult to do- unless the founders of the start-up can develop a truly upsetting technology surpassing existing capabilities. The kernel of thought behind many start-ups is the desire to solve an isolated problem. By the time they get a solution to market, if they ever do, others have already worked out a patch or the newer versions of software eclipse the need for their solution. Failures are many among start-up companies. Crafting bits and bytes is truly different from working in stone. Stone works such as the Venus de Milo endure with lasting admiration and appeal. To date no one has suggested elevating old software in the same manner. Like the commissioned artist, the Techno Gypsies have to work on three fronts: first, developing new skills; second, on their current project, and; third, looking for their next meal. Initially the IT techies believed they would stay for protracted terms at whatever enterprise they were working for. Some still do. The advent of rapid changes in hardware and software, increased storage capacity and faster and faster processing times created obsolescence as quickly as it created opportunity. In modern times the patrons of the Techno Gypsies are the established business enterprises along with the venture capitalists that facilitate the growth of new technologies and companies. Particularly in the start-up segment, people try to commercialize the next ‘best thing.’ A significant number of these new ventures fail; for a variety of reasons. The venture capitalists and the founders of these new ventures absorb the financial losses while the Techno Gypsies move on to a new patron, where they can apply the skills honed at the last job to a new one. In no other modern enterprise is such freedom with respect to the transfer of intellectual property tolerated. This movement has created a Gypsy-like motion among techies. Many now think in terms of projects rather than jobs; expecting them to last a measured number of weeks instead of months and years. As they continue to build and expand the information infrastructure, it is reasonable to contemplate on organized group emerging among the Techno Gypsies within the n Why Your Tiny Business Wants A Toll Free Number NOW techs spread from the confines of the Fortune 500 to virtually every business in the U.S.All small business owners dream of greater leverage which means the reaping large profits from a simple inexpensive tool. So they look around for tools, tactics or software that will give them an edge. But they miss one of the most effective tools that sits right under their nose. The profit-building tool that most small business people miss is the toll free number.Independent surveys have shown that toll free numbers can increase your business’ sales, improve the branding and perception of your company and significantly increase the value of your business at the point of sale. Below are 3 critical reasons why you should get a toll free number for your small business today.Reason 1. You’ll Enjoy Increased SalesVanity or custom toll free numbers such as 1 800 WORKOUT are proven to increase sales. PRWeekly stated that such numbers result in more calls that are better qualified both by desire for - and also the ability to buy - the product or service. With the right phrase, a specific number for your business will make an instant bridge in your customer's mind between a desire she has and your product or service.Reason 2. You Can Increase The Asset Value Of Your Business At The Time Of SaleSmar In today’s corporate setting the Techno Gypsies are the only group of employees who move freely and frequently between jobs. It is not unusual for some of them to think of job length in terms of weeks rather than the years other employees are expected to spend before moving. Corporate leaders and the venture capitalists that fund new companies use a starkly different mobility standard for Techno Gypsies than any other group of employees. The modern need for ever increasing information and the rapidly evolving technologies have enabled the Techno Gypsies complete freedom of movement. The reasons for the patronage of the Renaissance: prestige-pleasure-piety drifted significantly to today’s reasons: profit and information control. While the driving motivators have changed, similarity exists in the outlook of today’s patrons. The ‘A’ list being comprised of large enterprises with ongoing IT needs. These are the long term patrons. The alternative is to work for one of the smaller enterprises with immediate, but short work duration, needs, or take a risk with a start-up. The start-ups have a certain cachet and appeal as each of them, theoretically, has the potential of becoming a major player and large enterprise- if they develop and market reliable, innovative products with staying power. This is becoming increasingly difficult to do- unless the founders of the start-up can develop a truly upsetting technology surpassing existing capabilities. The kernel of thought behind many start-ups is the desire to solve an isolated problem. By the time they get a solution to market, if they ever do, others have already worked out a patch or the newer versions of software eclipse the need for their solution. Failures are many among start-up companies. Crafting bits and bytes is truly different from working in stone. Stone works such as the Venus de Milo endure with lasting admiration and appeal. To date no one has suggested elevating old software in the same manner. Like the commissioned artist, the Techno Gypsies have to work on three fronts: first, developing new skills; second, on their current project, and; third, looking for their next meal. Initially the IT techies believed they would stay for protracted terms at whatever enterprise they were working for. Some still do. The advent of rapid changes in hardware and software, increased storage capacity and faster and faster processing times created obsolescence as quickly as it created opportunity. In modern times the patrons of the Techno Gypsies are the established business enterprises along with the venture capitalists that facilitate the growth of new technologies and companies. Particularly in the start-up segment, people try to commercialize the next ‘best thing.’ A significant number of these new ventures fail; for a variety of reasons. The venture capitalists and the founders of these new ventures absorb the financial losses while the Techno Gypsies move on to a new patron, where they can apply the skills honed at the last job to a new one. In no other modern enterprise is such freedom with respect to the transfer of intellectual property tolerated. This movement has created a Gypsy-like motion among techies. Many now think in terms of projects rather than jobs; expecting them to last a measured number of weeks instead of months and years. As they continue to build and expand the information infrastructure, it is reasonable to contemplate on organized group emerging among the Techno Gypsies within the n You Can Laugh At Money Worries - If You Avoid This One Mistake ution. Failures are many among start-up companies.So now you are convinced, you want to quit your job and work from home in your own home business.Smart move. As J. Paul Getty observed, "You must be in business for yourself, you'll never get rich working for someone else." And he would know. His father, George F. Getty thrust Paul into running George F. Getty, Inc. before he was even 20.Paul was very close to his elderly father and got very good at managing his father's company very quickly. Under Paul's supervision the company expanded rapidly, and before too long he was making his Dad millions. It was here that J. Paul Getty made his famous observation.It didn't take long though for Paul to go out on his own, and the story of J. Paul Getty was written.But you are here now on the threshold of the same decision, and you are looking at all kinds of vehicles to take you to business success. What business will you be in, what are you going to sell?There are a myriad of products out there being sold through mlm ‘opportunities', there are wholesalers with literally millions of products you can sell and drop ship to people. Maybe you even have your own product in mind that you've been working on because it's something that 'everybody needs'.< Crafting bits and bytes is truly different from working in stone. Stone works such as the Venus de Milo endure with lasting admiration and appeal. To date no one has suggested elevating old software in the same manner. Like the commissioned artist, the Techno Gypsies have to work on three fronts: first, developing new skills; second, on their current project, and; third, looking for their next meal. Initially the IT techies believed they would stay for protracted terms at whatever enterprise they were working for. Some still do. The advent of rapid changes in hardware and software, increased storage capacity and faster and faster processing times created obsolescence as quickly as it created opportunity. In modern times the patrons of the Techno Gypsies are the established business enterprises along with the venture capitalists that facilitate the growth of new technologies and companies. Particularly in the start-up segment, people try to commercialize the next ‘best thing.’ A significant number of these new ventures fail; for a variety of reasons. The venture capitalists and the founders of these new ventures absorb the financial losses while the Techno Gypsies move on to a new patron, where they can apply the skills honed at the last job to a new one. In no other modern enterprise is such freedom with respect to the transfer of intellectual property tolerated. This movement has created a Gypsy-like motion among techies. Many now think in terms of projects rather than jobs; expecting them to last a measured number of weeks instead of months and years. As they continue to build and expand the information infrastructure, it is reasonable to contemplate on organized group emerging among the Techno Gypsies within the next few years rivaling that of the freemasons. In any start-up time and money are in chronic short supply. For the new enterprise to survive, let alone succeed, it is necessary for the founders to have the skills or bring in a leader with the skills necessary to focus on the commercial necessities: viable product, timely development, attracting financing at each stage on commercially acceptable terms, building market acceptance as the product is being developed, and transitioning from development to production and sales.. These skills differ markedly yet compliment the ones necessary for product conception and actual development. Give yourself an edge when it comes to the success of your start-up. © 2007, Charles B. Van Duzer
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