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company.bigb
= Company
{wiki}

= Companies with investors are evil
{parent=Company}
{wiki}

All companies with investors are <evil>, make no mistake.

They may have nice looking save the world charity campaigns, but once you get even close to affecting their revenue stream, the axe falls. The charity is only a publicity stunt to reduce wages.

Some level of <governments have lost all power to companies>[government intervention is needed] to conrol investor's greed.

It is just a question of business model: some business models are eviler than others. <Microsoft Windows>[Making people pay for operating systems] being possible the most evil of all.

One thing must be said however. You can learn a lot by working in a good company, because it ends up putting you in contact with practical real problems that you wouldn't otherwise see by just doing your own random low-tech startup. This is especially valuable if said company is also enlightened enough to use and contribute back to <open source software>, thus improving the world and paying back the moral debt of using other people's work for free.

Another important point to consider is who in the company is evil. In a sane tech company, the lowly engineers are going to be non-evil. And then the more you go up the management chain, the more aligned you have to be with investors, and thus the more and more evil you get. <Ciro's everyone gets a raise story>[HR is just evil from the bottom though], it's just the nature of their job.

= Ciro's everyone gets a raise story
{c}
{parent=Company}
{wiki}

Once upon a time, when Ciro worked at a company, one day the company decided to give everyone a 20% raise.

The likely reason was that <Apple> was coming to town, and was sucking the fuck out of the company's talent.

Nothing ever drove it so clearly into Ciro's heart the obvious fact that even for skilled jobs, companies don't pay you what you're worth. They pay you as little as possible so you won't quit to join someone else. It is pure market forces in play.

The annoying thing is that people are highly non-<fungible>, so much like painting auctions, you can only estimate your price by putting yourself on auction and seeing what people will pay for you, i.e. interviewing for new jobs.

Another point is that people have <Finance is a cancer of society>[all sorts of stupid restrictions such as not wanting to work on certain areas for moral reasons], or not wanting to move away from a certain area they like. Companies will of course readily exploit such weakness to be able to pay less. Silly non-rational beings.

= The place for beauty in companies
{parent=Company}

Many/most companies are unable to give any beauty to its employees.

Hiring is simply a process of "let's get this money making project working ASAP", bring people in, without considering <Brooks's law>.

And then when that happens, companies put people in extremely narrow knowledge areas, making them unable to see or participate in the bigger picture of things, unless they spend 10 years there and reach architect status.

This is perhaps particularly painful for <high flying bird vs gophers>[high flying birds] like <Ciro Santilli>.

Companies need a higher top to down force that attempts to actually teach the business and tech to every employee to counter the low level manager get things done now pressure.

Companies that are able to do that, will have many more employees with a sense of purpose, and with the ability to innovate. Those companies will win.

= Technology company
{parent=Company}
{wiki}

= Tech company
{synonym}

= Big tech
{parent=Technology company}
{wiki}

\Video[https://web.archive.org/web/20230106082847im_/https://static.wixstatic.com/media/ecb00b_069dbba0a888457387f7c06feefc9241~mv2.png/v1/fill/w_504,h_491,al_c,lg_1/ecb00b_069dbba0a888457387f7c06feefc9241~mv2.png]
{title=Humourous depiction of some <big tech> organization charts}
{description=TODO author.}

= List of technology companies
{c}
{parent=Technology company}
{wiki}

= Siemens
{c}
{parent=List of technology companies}
{tag=German company}
{wiki}

= Siemens spinoff
{c}
{parent=Siemens}

= Conglomerate
{disambiguate=company}
{parent=Company}

= Honeywell
{c}
{parent=Conglomerate (company)}
{wiki}

= Lifestyle business
{parent=Company}
{wiki}

= Type of company
{parent=Company}
{wiki}

= Spin-off company
{parent=Type of company}
{wiki}

= Spin-out company
{synonym}

= University spin-off company
{parent=Spin-off company}
{tag=University}

= Startup company
{parent=Type of company}
{wiki}

= Startup
{synonym}

= Pivot
{disambiguate=Strategy}
{parent=Startup company}

= How to value startup shares
{parent=Startup company}

* https://startupguide.hbs.edu/people/joining-a-startup/how-to-value-your-equity-at-an-early-stage-startup/ 10%

= Unicorn
{disambiguate=startup}
{parent=Startup company}

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unicorn_startup_companies

= Venture capital
{parent=Startup company}
{wiki}

= Venture capitalist
{parent=Venture capital}

Bibliography:
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Something_Ventured[Something Ventured] (2011) <documentary>

= Venture capital firm
{parent=Venture capital}

= Sequoia Capital
{c}
{parent=Venture capital firm}
{tag=Company}
{title2=1972}
{wiki}

\Video[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKN-abRJMEw]
{title=Target Big Markets by <Don Valentine> (2010)}

= Don Valentine
{c}
{parent=Sequoia Capital}
{wiki}

He was at <Fairchild>. That place was nuts.

= Michael Moritz
{c}
{parent=Sequoia Capital}
{wiki}

\Video[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTNFQeYEdvc]
{title=<Michael Moritz> interview by Stanford Graduate School of Business (2019)}
{description=The dude is quirky.}

= Kleiner Perkins
{c}
{parent=Venture capital firm}
{wiki}

\Video[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xWGSUZmkIc]
{title=John Doerr Q&A at Berkeley (2015)}
{description=
* https://youtu.be/4xWGSUZmkIc?t=634 invest in <batteries>
}

= List of companies by country
{parent=Company}

= American company
{c}
{parent=List of companies by country}
{tag=United States}

= Australian company
{c}
{parent=List of companies by country}
{tag=Australia}

= British company
{c}
{parent=List of companies by country}
{tag=United Kingdom}

= Canadian company
{c}
{parent=List of companies by country}
{tag=Canada}

= French company
{c}
{parent=List of companies by country}
{tag=France}

= German company
{c}
{parent=List of companies by country}
{tag=Germany}

= Japanese company
{c}
{parent=List of companies by country}
{tag=Japan}

= List of companies
{parent=Company}
{wiki}

= Business-to-business
{parent=Company}
{wiki}

= B2B
{c}
{synonym}
{title2}

= Entrepreneur
{parent=Company}

= Elon Musk
{c}
{parent=Entrepreneur}
{wiki}

Musk is a truly ambivalent personality. Some points are very good. Some are very bad.

Respect on the technical side by <Ciro Santilli>.

But the way he treated his first wife <Justine Musk>, is very very weird, incomprehensible: https://www.marieclaire.com/sex-love/a5380/millionaire-starter-wife/

Positive <Cirocoins> for possibly going to reverse <the deplatforming of Donald Trump>[Twitter's unfair Trump ban] if his <Twitter> acquisition goes through:
* https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1519036983137509376
  \Q[
  By "free speech", I simply mean that which matches the law.

  I am against censorship that goes far beyond the law.

  If people want less free speech, they will ask government to pass laws to that effect.

  Therefore, going beyond the law is contrary to the will of the people.
  ]
* https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1507259709224632344

Negative <Cirocoins> for according to Wikipedia:
\Q[[Within the merged company [Thiel's Confinity + Elon's X.com], Musk returned as CEO. Musk's preference for Microsoft software over Unix created a rift in the company and caused Thiel to resign.]]

\Video[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IcIzaqSnBdA]
{title=The REAL Reason Why Tesla Made All Patents Open-Source by The not so boring Man (2021)}
{description=Supercut from various interviews/presentations in which Elon saying that Tesla has <open source> patents and pro open source stuff. Can we trust it? Maybe.}

= Elon Musk's family
{c}
{parent=Elon Musk}

= Justine Musk
{c}
{parent=Elon Musk's family}
{wiki}

= How can I be as great by Justine Musk
{c}
{parent=Justine Musk}

https://www.quora.com/How-can-I-be-as-great-as-Bill-Gates-Steve-Jobs-Elon-Musk-or-Sir-Richard-Branson/answer/Justine-Musk How can I be as great as <Bill Gates>, <Steve Jobs>, <Elon Musk> or Sir Richard Branson? answer by Musk's ex-wife <Justine Musk>.

= X Æ A-12
{c}
{parent=Elon Musk's family}

= X Æ A-Xii
{title2}
{synonym}

= Hermann Hauser
{c}
{parent=Entrepreneur}
{wiki}

= Xavier Niel
{c}
{parent=Entrepreneur}
{wiki}

\Video[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oBPMFcURM_Y]
{title=Xavier Niel, Iliad - Free: Je suis un casseur de monopoles by DECIDEURSTV (2011)}
{description=Title translation: "I'm a hunter of monopolies".}