David Callay

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David Callay

David Callay

@dcallay

Leyendo one day at a time.

가입일 Ekim 2010
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David Callay
David Callay@dcallay·
"Para escribir hay que irse a la mierda, como tú te fuiste, papá."
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David Callay
David Callay@dcallay·
Me gustó su estilo de escritura: gracioso, personal, imprudente. Suena el tipo de personas con las que me gusta tener una amistad. Además, no puedo imaginar lo doloroso que fue hacer el viaje y contarlo en el libro. Gracias por tu historia. @AlmaDeliaMC
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David Callay
David Callay@dcallay·
"Money buys happiness in the same way drugs bring pleasure: Incredible if done right, dangerous if used to mask a weakness, and disastrous when no amount is ever enough." collabfund.com/blog/wealth-vs…
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David Callay 리트윗함
Felipe Rodríguez Moreno
Siéntense, inhalen y miren esta entrevista. Cada minuto vale la pena. Luego exhalen y traten de negarme que quieren, como yo, incendiarlo todo. Brutal y desesperanzador es poco 👇🏻
Gabriela Panchana Briones ❤️🇪🇨@EnVozAlta

Me ha consternado y conmovido profundamente escuchar a @SammLozada en su entrevista con @mariasolborja. Samantha era, hasta hace unas semanas, directora provincial del @CJudicaturaEc en Orellana. Fue amenazada e intentaron asesinarla con disparos a la cabeza. Se salvó milagrosamente de ese atentado, pero no del abandono del Estado. Una semana después del intento de asesinato, el pleno del CJ la despidió, y la dejaron a su suerte. Hoy está autoexiliada en otro país, pero las amenazas contra ella y su familia persisten. El país con la justicia al servicio de narcos y asesinos es invivible. Escúchenla, y sigamos presionando a la @AsambleaEcuador, a @NielsOlsen y a la @BancadaADN para que procedan con el juicio político y la destitución de Mario Godoy. #FueraGodoy Mírenla completa aquí 👉🏼 youtube.com/live/skmwXbFwc…

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David Callay
David Callay@dcallay·
"New technologies give us leverage to do more tasks better. But we end up having to work just as hard as before (if not harder) to remain competitive and keep up with the joneses." indiehackers.com/post/lifestyle…
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Thread Reader App
Thread Reader App@threadreaderapp·
New to unrolling threads? Not sure how it works? You can practice here! Simply mention our name with the keyword "unroll" to any of the tweets in this thread so you can see how unrolling works!
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David Callay
David Callay@dcallay·
"...the key problem faced by European startups can be summarized in one word: patriotism. There is virtually none in Europe, and more than anything that's what's killing EU startups, or preventing them from developing."
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand

I just read this WSJ article on why Europe's tech scene is so much smaller than the US's and China's. I'm afraid that, like most articles on this topic, it largely misses the mark. Which in itself illustrates a key reason why Europe is lagging behind: when you fail to understand the root causes of an issue, you have zero chance to solve it. What makes me competent to speak on this topic? Back in the late 2000s and early 2010s, I founded and led HouseTrip which at the time was one of Europe's top startups. We were the first historical startup in which all top 3 VC investors in Europe invested. So I have a pretty intimate knowledge of the European entrepreneurship ecosystem and what it takes to create and grow a tech company in Europe. We were pretty promising as a startup. In fact as promising as it can possibly get. We had a similar concept to Airbnb (with some notable differences I won't bore you with), except we created the company 1 year before they did. Which means we were the first-mover - globally - with a multi-billion-euro concept, strong financial backing by the 3 top investors in Europe and, at some point, a team of 250 people with some of the brightest minds in tech in Europe. Everything we needed to succeed. And yet we didn't succeed: ultimately we were essentially crushed by our American competitor Airbnb in our home turf - Europe - and we had no choice but to sell ourselves to another American company, Tripadvisor. Believe me, I've reflected long and hard on how that could have happened. In fact after I left the company in 2015 I even spent 3 months in isolation in the Annapurna mountains in Nepal to reflect full time on exactly that 😅 And I then moved to China, where I spent the next 8 years and where I had the chance to study their ecosystem to understand why they're successful and Europe isn't. So all in all, I think I have some degree of legitimacy to comment on this topic. The WSJ article says that Europe lags behind due to the usual suspects, the reasons you constantly hear about: too much regulation, fragmented European markets, limited access to financing, a culture that isn't conducive to the startup grind, etc. Some of those are true, but imho all are secondary. Take excessive regulations for instance, which gets mentioned all the time. If they were such a hindrance to startups, why would American startups succeed in Europe - like Airbnb in our case - and European startups not? We all face the same regulations 🤷 Or take fragmented markets. Same question: how could US startups successfully conquer these fragmented EU markets when European startups can't? Because that's the real elephant in the room, and really the story of the European tech scene since the advent of the internet: US startups have shown a remarkable ability to capture European markets despite the supposed barriers, making many of the "usual suspects" explanations for Europe's tech struggles very unconvincing. In other words, logically, any explanation where both US and European startups face identical barriers fails to address the fundamental difference in outcomes we consistently observe. Based on my experience, the key problem faced by European startups can be summarized in one word: patriotism. There is virtually none in Europe, and more than anything that's what's killing EU startups, or preventing them from developing. It used to drive me absolutely nuts at HouseTrip. What a startup needs first and foremost, especially a consumer-facing startup like we were, is marketing, to become famous. At first, when I created the company and before Airbnb was even a thing, I used to pitch the company to the media and the general response I would get was almost one of contempt, as in "why would I belittle myself to write about your startup? And furthermore, who would be stupid enough to stay in an apartment when there are hotels? You guys have no future..." And then Airbnb got launched and the American media started their thing, hyping the company like it was the greatest innovation since sliced bread, like they were national heroes, giving them hundreds of millions in free publicity. That's when European media started to take notice. Not of us, god forbid, but of Airbnb. The concept was promoted by Silicon Valley, see... so now it was valid. So I went back to pitch HouseTrip to European media. This time around I was met with a different kind of contempt: "So you guys are like Airbnb? Why would we cover a European copycat when we can just write about the real American original?" Luckily I'm not violent but lets say those moments really tested my civility 😅 All in all, we arrived in the absolutely grotesque situation where, despite Airbnb not having yet set foot in Europe, they were already a cultural phenomenon there, promoted by European media, for free, when the European original - yours truly - had to spend millions on paid marketing (mostly to Google and Facebook, American companies) to achieve a small fraction of the brand recognition. Which means that, insanely, Airbnb was probably doing more business in Europe than we did before even opening an office there, simply on the back of the free publicity they were getting. How on earth can you even compete with that? This dynamic was at play with general European elites too. I remember very clearly having dinner next to a legendary European entrepreneur and investor - who I won't name, a man who supposedly, on paper, is dedicating his life to furthering the European tech ecosystem. We naturally got to talk about HouseTrip and he literally told me, and this is an exact quote: "you know I don't really like copycats, they really hurt the European ecosystem." Another big test for my civility that night... And even if we had been a copycat, so what? That's how China got started, there's nothing to be ashamed of. You need to learn to walk before you can run. In fact if you study the history of innovation you'll find that every major tech power, including the US, started by imitating and adapting others' innovations before developing their own. Speaking of China, again a country that I know in depth for having lived there for 8 years after HouseTrip, I've come to the conclusion that patriotism, a deeply rooted mindset of sovereignty, is truly the magic ingredient behind their success. Contrary to popular belief, they don't do it in a stupid way by just banning competition. Those cases are actually very rare and only occur if the companies in question violate Chinese law in pretty egregious ways. Most of the time it's the exact contrary: they welcome foreign companies and competition, but create conditions where local alternatives can thrive alongside them, giving Chinese users and businesses legitimate options to choose domestic champions. Which means you end up with, for instance, Apple doing well in China but simultaneously allowing the rise of Huawei or Xiaomi. Or Tesla doing well in China but simultaneously allowing the rise of BYD or Nio. Etc. And China is, interestingly, more comparable to the EU than most people realize. It is, again contrary to popular belief, extremely decentralized when it comes to doing business, with various provinces competing against each other much the same way EU countries compete against each other. But they do it in such a way where, again, the overarching sense of Chinese sovereignty never gets sacrificed at the altar of provincial competition. And where the ultimate goal is to develop Chinese champions which can successfully compete on the global stage. So there you have it, the dirty little secret behind Europe's lag. We're essentially witnessing a "colonization of the minds" whereby Europe has structurally internalized its technological inferiority, celebrating American startups while dismissing its own homegrown companies. Why does this barely ever get talked about? Think about it: do you seriously think that the Wall Street Journal would start advocating for, essentially, policies hostile to American tech dominance? Much better to focus on the usual red herrings like too much regulation or fragmentation which, conveniently, would primarily result in clearing obstacles for American tech giants to dominate European markets even further, rather than nurturing homegrown competitors. This article is, in itself, an illustration of the "colonization of the minds".

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David Callay
David Callay@dcallay·
@FRM87 Que triste y aterrador que esto me llegara a pasar. Hay tanto camino por recorrer como país que empiezo a dudar si es el país que quiero para mi familia 😔
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David Callay
David Callay@dcallay·
"It is important to note that as an AI language model, I can provide a general perspective, but you should consult with medical professionals for personalized advice..." @JMarkOckerbloom/114217609254949527" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">mastodon.social/@JMarkOckerblo
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David Callay
David Callay@dcallay·
I know that businesses need to be profitable, but please show some decency with your clients. "Encouraging more digital adoption by nudging customers to go online to self-solve," and "taking decisive short-term action to generate warranty cost efficiencies."
pourmecoffee@pourmecoffee

This is unconstitutional. "HP is trying to force consumer PC and print customers to use online and other digital support channels by setting a minimum 15-minute wait time for anyone that phones the call center" theregister.com/2025/02/20/hp_…

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David Callay
David Callay@dcallay·
"An AI algorithm was taught to produce the lightest and strongest possible geometric structure for a nanomaterial. The result was a carbon nanolattice light enough to sit on a soap bubble, but can also support more than a million times its own mass." popularmechanics.com/science/a63786…
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