Anyone aware of writing business plans, getting capital, and selling ideas?
12/16/2005 3:01:35 PM
yepit's not hard, just requires a lot of persistance and luck
12/16/2005 3:05:55 PM
do you have any experience?
12/16/2005 3:06:34 PM
let me know if you need a CIO
12/16/2005 3:08:31 PM
i had to make a faux start-up company for a class that we had to do business plans, product specifications, etc. forkitty hawk capital is a local VC firm that you could try, they helped fund RF microdevices
12/16/2005 3:09:29 PM
http://www.score.org/These guys are a good resource for someone starting a new business. The N.C. chapter is downtown in the offices above the US Post Office on Fayetteville Street Mall.
12/16/2005 3:09:31 PM
well, I have a couple very good ideas but my busy schedule hasn't given me time to research opportunities in the RTP area. I am going to design the technology and possibly develop applications for it.
12/16/2005 3:10:15 PM
CI Partners is a company here in Raleigh that invests in startup companies. I took an class on innovation and we created prototypes for new products and pitched them to that company.
12/16/2005 3:36:29 PM
12/16/2005 3:56:41 PM
well, I am talking more along the lines of creating typical user applications for the technology to market it. Users need something to begin with.
12/16/2005 3:59:32 PM
Maybe I am an ignoramus, but I have no idea what you are talking about.
12/16/2005 4:07:04 PM
for example the yahoo maps API.
12/16/2005 4:09:31 PM
Well, now that you used an example I can understand a little better. I'd suggest a technical writer be on your team, though. For instance:
12/16/2005 4:18:46 PM
you are too stupid to succeed. don't bother/thread
12/16/2005 4:19:56 PM
Anything counts as more successful than a frikkin Best Buy Geek Squad monkey.
12/16/2005 4:21:05 PM
i'll tell my roommate you called him a monkey, redneck.
12/16/2005 4:22:26 PM
its esgargs man he is a smart dude
12/16/2005 4:22:50 PM
Stop talking to yourself in third person, terrorist.
12/16/2005 4:23:03 PM
talking to myself in third person? i was wrong, you aren't stupid. you are freakin retarded.
12/16/2005 4:24:06 PM
yea you never worked for Geek Squad. Tell me you weren't the one who suggested than an A/C actually heats up a room, too.
12/16/2005 4:29:11 PM
A heat pump can both heat and cool a room. What people normally term an A/C in the summer time is normally the same device that heats in the winter time, so when you say an "A/C can heat a room" that can be accurate, depending on what you take the terms to mean. Also, if you've ever stood by the condenser of an HVAC system, or behind a window unit AC, you will notice that it does actually blow heat (the same heat it's extracting from your house).
12/16/2005 4:36:18 PM
Except that if you use a heat pump to heat a room, it has so little efficiency that you'd end up paying thousands of dollars to heat an average house.You people seriously lack brains.
12/16/2005 4:38:36 PM
uh, wrong.And since natural gas prices have quadrupled over the last couple of years, heat pumps are even MORE economic.
12/16/2005 4:52:12 PM
As for your thread topic:Everyone and their brother has a "couple of great ideas". If yours is really good, make it first, THEN worry about this stuff. If you need shit tons of capital and resources JUST to get started, I can almost garauntee it's not going to be worth anyone's time.
12/16/2005 4:53:54 PM
12/16/2005 5:04:02 PM
A/C Does not heat insideHeat pumps will heat and cool inside thank to the reversing valveYou can't simply add a reversing valve to an A/C unit and make it a heat pump it is more complicated than that.Many many many people use heatpumps, including schools and office buildings. The International trade center in charlotte has several hundred heatpumps and they are VERY efficient (water source) Ground source is another effiecient one. The cooler it is outside the less efficient a heat pump is.Changing the setpoint on a heat pump by more than one degree at a time is a bad idea in the winter time. So do not set your heatpumps back at night. When it comes on after being set back it will bring the emergency heat (electric strip heat) on. That gets expensive.
12/16/2005 5:15:00 PM
haha
12/16/2005 5:15:12 PM
Heatpumps for heating directly is a very very inefficient process. Most heat pumps you talk about heat water or something. Also like you said you cannot use the same heat pump to cool and heat. noen is a fool on both his posts.[Edited on December 16, 2005 at 7:27 PM. Reason : .]
12/16/2005 7:20:42 PM
when I say water source heat pumps...never mind
12/16/2005 8:52:36 PM
12/17/2005 10:27:13 PM
twisted
12/17/2005 10:52:51 PM
Username : ultra Status : All American Posts : 560 (182.3 per day) Currently Online? : No Registered : 12/14/2005 (3.1 days ago) 182 POSTS PER DAY?? ARE YOU FUCKING SERIOUS?! THIS GUY HAS NO FUCKING LIFE!!!!
12/18/2005 1:12:43 AM
esgargs will never start any company much less a tech one
12/18/2005 10:47:05 AM
12/18/2005 6:01:01 PM
12/20/2005 7:54:59 AM
i'm not sure if anyone has pointed this out yet, but if you're a business noob, which it's pretty apparent you are, but your intent on starting a company, there's no reason to go right into the heart of RTP to do it. Just find some cheap office space in Raleigh or the surrounding areas to keep your costs down. Then once you're big time and VCs are knocking your door down to throw money at you, or you're actually making revenue, then you can move to a more tech friendly location like Cent. Campus or RTP or some business park in Cary. But just run it from your garage, or a cheap office or something economical for a while
12/20/2005 9:49:38 AM
i equate this to snewf's chessboard
12/20/2005 10:17:41 AM
HQ Raleigh, American Underground or First Flight center are all fine.
6/5/2014 9:43:56 PM
wat]
6/5/2014 11:57:07 PM
haha this thread is funny
6/6/2014 9:49:00 AM
Lets get back on topic about heat pumps
6/6/2014 11:19:32 AM
agreed.
6/6/2014 11:59:46 AM
^^^^ They are good places for startups.
6/6/2014 12:01:50 PM
you definitely will pay thousands of dollars to heat an average house with a heat pump, that's true[Edited on June 6, 2014 at 2:47 PM. Reason : .]
6/6/2014 2:47:10 PM
if you have a crappy heat pump, a poorly insulated (or poorly air-sealed) house or a very large house then yes you certainly can. But heat pumps are very viable especially down south. Our house is a little shy of 2500ft2 and the heat pump serves about 1300 ft2 of that and our record total winter electric bill still hasn't broken $100 for a single month even with lows in the single digits several times this winter (which was the coldest since we bought our house). Typically our total electric bill in the winter averages like $60 and that's obviously including more than the heat pump. Our heat pump is 13 years old and isn't even high efficiency.[Edited on June 6, 2014 at 7:12 PM. Reason : ]
6/6/2014 7:10:22 PM
No time frame was specified. Over the life of the heat pump, you will most certainly pay thousands of dollars.
6/6/2014 7:52:31 PM
6/6/2014 9:08:55 PM
^^ this
6/7/2014 7:59:46 AM