Αρχή » Αρθρογραφία
Φεύγει από το Facebook ο ένας συνιδρυτής
Ειδήσεις » Εταιρείες - 04/10/2008Ο Dustin Moskovitz, συνιδρυτής του Facebook, μαζί με τον Lead Engineer Justin Rosenstein, αποχωρούν από το μεγαλύτερο Social Network του πλανήτη, για να ιδρύσουν μια νέα εταιρεία ανάπτυξης software.
Το Facebook το επιβεβαίωσε και από ότι φαίνεται θα φύγουν μέσα αυτόν τον μήνα.
Σύμφωνα με τον Rosenstein, φεύγουν για να δημιουργήσουν μια νέα εταιρία που θα αναπτύξει ένα υψηλού επιπέδου και ανοιχτού λογισμικού software development kit για το web.
Ο Rosenstein ήταν γνωστός για ένα ενθουσιώδες email που είχε γράψει όταν μπήκε στο Facebook πέρσι. Αυτή τη φορά έγραψε ένα μήνυμα σχετικά με την απόφασή του, το οποίο δημοσιεύτηκε στο internet:
I was a nerdy little boy. (Not much has changed.) Starting at age ten, I would spend hours a day holed up in my room, alone or with friends, programming til I collapsed. When I grew up, I wanted to be a software entrepreneur. I knew this with as much conviction, and about as much knowledge of what the role actually entailed, as other kids might have wanted to be an astronaut or President. In high school, I even started “Smiley Technologies, Inc.” and bamboozled some friends one summer into working on a Java-based productivity suite for group collaboration… but by September we learned the hard lesson that it takes more than three months to take on Microsoft Office.
By college, I felt pretty confident I was never gonna work for anyone other than myself. That is, until I heard about Google’s associate product management program. I have an enormous amount of respect and admiration for Google, and the opportunity to be on the inside, working as a mini-entrepreneur, was just too sweet to pass up. So I promised myself I’d stay at Google for just a few years, and then head out on my own.
That is, until a few years later when I got a friend-request from Dustin Moskovitz, who had co-founded Facebook with his college roommates around the time I’d joined Google. I told him I wasn’t interested in another job, but we met up for lunch anyway, and I’m glad we did. The more I learned about Facebook, the more inspired I was by its mission and team, and eventually decided this too was just too important an opportunity to say No to.
I’m really happy I took the job. I’m thrilled with the time I’ve had at the company, and with the incredible peers I’ve gotten to know and work with. But something else exciting happened in the year and a half since I joined Facebook. I started spending a lot of time after work talking to Dustin. Efficiency-through-software was dear to his heart as well, and we would stay up til 3am raving about how shortcut keys and high-level abstractions would Change The World. We shared a passion for technology, for entrepreneurship, and for using them to solve the same set of problems.
As our visions for how productivity software could work came into alignment, we thought about building it inside of Facebook. It was an attractive option in many ways, and neither of us was eager to exit a company that was in such an exciting phase of its development. But at some point it became clear that doing so wouldn’t be good for Facebook or for us. Facebook needs to continue its mission of making the world more open through social software, without distraction, and the new project requires a company built around it from the ground up, with the goals of efficiency and group collaboration embedded deeply into its DNA from day 1.
So we’ve decided to leave Facebook (in about a month) and start a new company, to build an extensible enterprise productivity suite, along with a high-level open-source software development toolkit, built for the Web from the ground up.
We see this new venture as very complimentary to Facebook. We hope our products will become to your work life what Facebook.com is to your social life. Our software will use Facebook Connect as the default option for identity and authentication. Our user interface will adopt many of Facebook’s conventions, creating a seamless and familiar experience for current Facebook users. And if our new development tools turn out to be useful, we hope the Facebook engineering team will come to adopt them.
Leaving Facebook makes me sad, but I feel I have to follow my passion on this. I can’t say enough about Facebook and the friends I’ve made here, and I am enormously excited for the company’s further success, a destiny I’m confident it will reach regardless of my participation in it. Finally, I’m really grateful to Mark, Chris Cox, Sheryl, Yishan, Chamath, Elliot, and others, who’ve been helping us make this a smooth transition, and to my family for guidance and support. Thank you; it’s meant a lot to me.
Ο Mark Zuckerberg δήλωσε τα παρακάτω:
Dustin has always had Facebook’s best interests at heart and will always be someone I turn to for advice.
Tags: Facebook, social networking, Justin Rosenstein, Dustin Moskovitz, Mark Zuckerberg, open source. Προσθήκη άρθρου σε: Freestuff | Del.icio.us | | | | ForaCamp (top) |