- Jun 24, 2001
- 24,195
- 857
- 126
I've got too many awesome ideas for so many things, but I don't see them as anything I can possibly do by myself (Therefore I'd have to share the ideas with a capable team). I'm a self-educated, working, 21 year old that still lives with my mother and I don't have the type of education to know how things work in the business world. By the time I could complete college, these ideas will certainly be in use and unpatentable. I'm not gonna fork this over to some "get rich quick" idea-search company on TV. I have no idea what kind of proceeding to go through to do it myself (Who do I contact?). I'm sure people of the Highly Technical variety have some experience getting stuff patented, do they not? Help a guy out
(I don't want to stay poor living in this trailer forever)
THNX!
I dreamed of a peer-to-peer file swapping network with anonymous searches integrated into an IRC-like network long before Napster existed... If only I knew some C++! Then the Napster kid pops up, does it, gets it wrong, and kills the idea for everyone. By making it centered around music, instead of being able to share anything, it would not have been so easily targeted by the recording industry. It would have been the same as outlawing email, because it is capable of transmitting any kind of data; copyrighted or not. Also, they did not provide an alternative use to legitimize it, as the IRC likeness would have. Filetopia is VERY close to what I intended, but it was dead in the water from all the copy-cat software splitting userbases. I still have ideas to revolutionize that, but I've pretty much moved on. Now I have incredible ideas for distributed computing and how it can actually be mass-marketed and profited on. Can't give any more details, but I think it's big.
THNX!
I dreamed of a peer-to-peer file swapping network with anonymous searches integrated into an IRC-like network long before Napster existed... If only I knew some C++! Then the Napster kid pops up, does it, gets it wrong, and kills the idea for everyone. By making it centered around music, instead of being able to share anything, it would not have been so easily targeted by the recording industry. It would have been the same as outlawing email, because it is capable of transmitting any kind of data; copyrighted or not. Also, they did not provide an alternative use to legitimize it, as the IRC likeness would have. Filetopia is VERY close to what I intended, but it was dead in the water from all the copy-cat software splitting userbases. I still have ideas to revolutionize that, but I've pretty much moved on. Now I have incredible ideas for distributed computing and how it can actually be mass-marketed and profited on. Can't give any more details, but I think it's big.