1. How much money do you have in the bank? 2. What is your net outflow per month? 3. What is the post-money valuation of your last round? 4. What can you do that your competitors cannot? 5. What can your competitors do that you cannot? 6. Who are your investors? 7. Who is on your board of directors? 8. Has anyone in the engineering team actually shipped a product? 9. Assume that you have $0 for marketing, how would you market the product? 10. What keeps you awake at night?
# [PDF] LETTY M. RUSSELL: A FEMINIST LIBERATION APPROACH TO EDUCATING FOR ... File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML This article examines the Rev. Dr. Letty M. Russell's feminist liberation ..... In the following years the Rev. Letty Russell went on to study at Union ... www.religiouseducation.net/member/06_rea.../Brady_Judith.pdf - Similar - by LM RUSSELL - Related articles # Rev. Letty Russell, at 77; feminist theologian at Yale - The ... Rev. Letty Russell, at 77; feminist theologian at Yale - When Harvard University's Divinity School was slow to admit women in t : Encyclopedia.com. www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1P2-8719285.html - Cached - Similar -
Networks of coupled dynamical systems have been used to model ... and many other self-organizing systems. Ordinarily, the connection topology is assumed to be either completely regular or completely random. But many biological, technological and social networks lie somewhere between these two extremes. Here we explore simple models of networks that can be tuned through this middle ground: regular networks 'rewired' to introduce increasing amounts of disorder. We find that these systems can be highly clustered, like regular lattices, yet have small characteristic path lengths, like random graphs. We call them 'small-world' networks, by analogy with the small-world phenomenon (popularly 6 degrees of separation. The neural network of the worm Caenorhabditis elegans, the power grid of the western United States, and the collaboration graph of film actors are shown to be small-world networks.
Those of us who tend the land set about to planting The rest do what we can