I am not terribly impressed by that list as it looks like a collection of wouldn’t-it-be-nice-to-have wishes.
The Government section looks fine—the government is a big customer and does have very bad software. But yeah, the Diversity section is… weird. At least there is no Save the Environment section.
Not quite. This is a list of requests—the Y Combinator would like to find ways to achieve magical superpowers to cut through the government procurement bureaucracy.
I am not terribly impressed by that list as it looks like a collection of wouldn’t-it-be-nice-to-have wishes.
The Government section looks fine—the government is a big customer and does have very bad software. But yeah, the Diversity section is… weird. At least there is no Save the Environment section.
It suggests someone at Y Combinator now alieves he has magical superpowers about cutting through government procurement bureaucracy.
Not quite. This is a list of requests—the Y Combinator would like to find ways to achieve magical superpowers to cut through the government procurement bureaucracy.
Then why did the section talk about how inefficient government software was rather than cutting through procurement bureaucracy?
Because you need to have what’s called a “market opportunity” to start with.
A while back I worked at a startup (20-ish people) that had (UK) local government as their main customer.
Large companies don’t have a monopoly on providing bad software to governments, even if they have advantages.