Such great heights

Lauren’s sister and niece are visiting us this weekend. Lauren had this idea for us all to go take our first trapeze class.

Ok, sure, I’ll do it I say.

So this morning we head over to the Trapeze School New York which is near the Boston Garden.

We take the elevator to the top floor of a nondescript parking garage and the sign upon exit read:

Forget fear. Worry about the addiction.

What have I done.

The staff at the school were absolutely great. But it was so scary in the beginning. Especially the first time. It felt like an eternal climb up and that first leap, wow.

We spent two hours “flying” as they say. Everyone had a blast.

Soho, New York City. November 2014. 

This was quite a week. At 4am my alarm went off on Monday and I left Boston and headed to the west coast. After a few days of meetings in San Francisco, I flew to NYC for 4 meetings and then a return trip to Boston yesterday. By 11pm last night my head hit the pillow and I crashed. 

I’m wiped out and ready for some family time this weekend. 

How about you? 

Yesterday we hosted an event in San Francisco for all the founders in our portfolio. As investors we learn so much from the founders that we back every day and yesterday was an opportunity for them to help each other directly. 

I took this photograph of Bastian Lehmann at one of the breaks during the day. Bastian was checking out the latest version of Oculus called Crescent Bay which will blow your mind. (We are proud investors in Bastian’s company Postmates and were early investors in Oculus)

Thanks to all the founders that made time to participate at our collective event. We are grateful for all that you do. 

Mojang

Probably the most common question I get as an early stage venture capitalists is: “what is the most exciting thing you’ve seen lately.”

The easy answer is a link to the Spark Capital website. I led three investments this year (Crowdrise, Trello and one that will be announced next week) and I couldn’t be more excited them.

But today I want to mention a company that we didn’t invest in. Actually this company didn’t raise any venture capital or angel financing as far as I know.

The company is Mojang, the makers behind Minecraft.

The thing that is unusual about my enthusiasm about Mojang I’m not an active Minecraft user. Typically most/all of my investments had me as a user before I became an investor.

But I’ve spent countless hours with my 8year old boy in front of Minecraft.

Here’s what I love about it.

-I love the simplicity.

-I love that it is so creative. Yes, you can battle others but the real thing is making things.

-I love that it is social.

-I love that it is open and hackable. The amount of texture packs and mods we have messed around with is simply awesome.

-I love that it’s community is passionate and engaged

-I love that it is decentralized. You can run your own server

-i love the business model. They built a business model that works, scales and doesn’t take all of the economics from their ecosystem.

There are a few things about Minecraft that drive me crazy — like it runs better on a Windows box than a Mac. And the desktop app is Java based. And their mobile app is a second class citizen. And it’s unusual and disappointing they couldn’t keep the founder engaged after selling to Microsoft.

But they have so many things right. I hope it’s a role model for others.