| 1. | | Dotjs — hack the web (defunkt.io) |
| 309 points by duck on June 29, 2011 | 58 comments |
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| 2. | | The Tale of OpenGL vs. Direct3D (programmers.stackexchange.com) |
| 266 points by tilltheis on June 29, 2011 | 33 comments |
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| 3. | | Why is European broadband faster and cheaper? Blame the government (engadget.com) |
| 207 points by d0ne on June 29, 2011 | 139 comments |
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| 4. | | First Night With Google Plus: This is Very Cool (readwriteweb.com) |
| 184 points by Garbage on June 29, 2011 | 79 comments |
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| 5. | | Guide to Programming Clojure For Beginners (blackstag.com) |
| 183 points by swannodette on June 29, 2011 | 16 comments |
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| 6. | | Show HN: Can anonymous chat within identified groups create better discussions? (freeversation.com) |
| 165 points by akharris on June 29, 2011 | 104 comments |
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| 7. | | Global Interpreter Lock, or how to kill it (morepypy.blogspot.com) |
| 165 points by kingkilr on June 29, 2011 | 43 comments |
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| 8. | | JsPlumb - pipe your UI elements together (jsplumb.org) |
| 156 points by toni on June 29, 2011 | 15 comments |
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| 9. | | Wizards of bullshit: How Forbes turned $6.5 million into $20 billion (37signals.com) |
| 157 points by joshuacc on June 29, 2011 | 56 comments |
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| 10. | | "The legal profession is undergoing a massive structural shift" (abajournal.com) |
| 152 points by grellas on June 29, 2011 | 110 comments |
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| 11. | | What Google Learned from Wave and Buzz (smarterware.org) |
| 152 points by cjoh on June 29, 2011 | 62 comments |
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| 12. | | CA Amazon Tax Signed Into Law (latimes.com) |
| 144 points by cmod on June 29, 2011 | 106 comments |
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| 13. | | Local Food or Less Meat? Data Tells The Real Story (hbr.org) |
| 139 points by xbryanx on June 29, 2011 | 90 comments |
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| 14. | | Linus Torvalds on userspace filesystems (spinics.net) |
| 135 points by sasvari on June 29, 2011 | 98 comments |
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| 15. | | Death By Regulation: FaceCash Is Shutting Down in California (facecash.com) |
| 132 points by thinkcomp on June 29, 2011 | 34 comments |
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| 17. | | Amazon will end affiliate program in California if new law passes (boingboing.net) |
| 131 points by richcollins on June 29, 2011 | 161 comments |
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| 18. | | MySpace Acquired: Email From CEO Mike Jones To Employees (techcrunch.com) |
| 130 points by hydrazine on June 29, 2011 | 54 comments |
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| 19. | | Android-x86 Project - Run Android on Your PC (android-x86.org) |
| 121 points by pixdamix on June 29, 2011 | 28 comments |
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| 20. | | 2000 shell companies at one address in Wyoming (yahoo.com) |
| 113 points by hendler on June 29, 2011 | 39 comments |
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| 21. | | Show HN: Overlap.me - a new way to meet people & share your identity online (overlap.me) |
| 112 points by h34t on June 29, 2011 | 49 comments |
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| 22. | | 555 Timer footstool (evilmadscientist.com) |
| 111 points by gorloth on June 29, 2011 | 16 comments |
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| 23. | | Moving to New York: a Guide for Software Engineers (dblock.org) |
| 100 points by dblock on June 29, 2011 | 78 comments |
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| 24. | | California Startups: Legislative Emergency |
| 90 points by kposehn on June 29, 2011 | 55 comments |
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| 25. | | DNA (randsinrepose.com) |
| 85 points by filament on June 29, 2011 | 8 comments |
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| 26. | | Windows 8 for software developers: the Longhorn dream reborn? (arstechnica.com) |
| 83 points by hugorodgerbrown on June 29, 2011 | 28 comments |
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| 27. | | How to Acquire Users for Free (spencerfry.com) |
| 84 points by sachitgupta on June 29, 2011 | 17 comments |
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| 28. | | Clever Foursquare Hack Turns New York City Into a Giant Game of Risk (mashable.com) |
| 78 points by siculars on June 29, 2011 | 28 comments |
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| 29. | | Braintree Founder On Decision To Raise Capital vs. Continuing to Bootstrap (braintreepayments.com) |
| 73 points by daniel_levine on June 29, 2011 | 11 comments |
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| 30. | | Paul Buchheit at Startup School 08. This talk continues to inspire me (youtube.com) |
| 69 points by bemmu on June 29, 2011 | 8 comments |
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This is actually very relevant to the HN community, because it's all about how to run a business. The problem with legal services begins and ends with poor business practices.
Law firms are addicted to covering their own lack of spending discipline by raising their hourly rates and pushing attorneys to bill clients more for less value. The "solutions" that they're undertaking now (cutting associate salaries, etc.) are equally wrong-headed.
Four years ago, I was making $400K+ at a top law firm. When I became eligible for partnership at my firm, I decided to leave instead. Why? Because I did not want to own a tiny amount of equity in a poorly-run business. Down the hall from me were several men in their mid-eighties who were drawing $1MM+ pensions and turning up for work two days a week. They had teams of secretaries who printed off their email and read them a digest each morning. I watched the firm spend, spend, spend to recruit "the best and the brightest" from Ivy League schools. After those new lawyers were hired, they would be put to work doing tasks that any decent temp worker could do. Young attorneys were being billed out at $500+ per hour and pressured to make their minimum hourly quotas every year. Our offices were expensive. Our parties were expensive. The I.T. support was expensive because it had painted itself into vendor lock-in and a huge (and useless) support staff. I flew first class everywhere. I stayed in the Four Seasons for months on end.
Sounds great, right? Nope – not when you're considering becoming an owner of that company. I saw the writing on the wall. Clients were bailing. They were getting better at doing my job with in house people. They were pressuring firm management to write off big bills and compete in RFPs.
So I got out, and I've never looked back. I did it because I think I can run a business better than they do. I did it because I actually care about whether my clients feel like they've gotten their money's worth. Also, I did it because I wanted to build an IT platform for lawyers that wasn't hampered by incompetent IT staff and poorly-chosen, expensive solutions.
Today, I have many of the same clients that I had back then. My clients are some of the biggest names in their field, and they stuck with me instead of sticking with the big name law firms. When my clients ask me to quote a fixed price for my work on a project, I give them a reasonable fixed price because I can afford to do that. I have low overhead (ridiculously low, actually). I can provide better service than ever before, because I have better tools at my disposal. I don't waste time fighting my way through clumsy solutions like Sharepoint, Deltaview, Worksite, or whatever other POS is in vogue at big law firms today.
I could go on about this forever, but suffice it to say that this article and the phenomenon behind it is extremely interesting to me. I also think it's a great case study for entrepreneurs. Think of it this way: what if your target market was dominated by companies that charge way too much, are extremely inefficient, and are carrying a huge, ever-growing cost basis? Sounds like a good opportunity, right? Well, it is!