misteryo: Who else around here makes do for themselves by working twice as hard and daily telling themselves, "Hey, at least I don't have a boss to answer to?"
Work twice as smart, not twice as hard.
timppu: Here I've always thought that if you start a company which starts making a loss and you go into heavy debts... then that is quite often your personal debt.
One of the common mistakes people make is thinking that you need money to make money. They don't think about their business model and invest into something that puts them in a hole to begin with. People who get into business debt or take out mortgages generally have no concept of money or business. It's rarer that someone actually knows what to do with cash injections.
Owning a physical location isn't that great of an idea. You have to pay a lease on the building plus a lease on the property. Expecting to make $20,000-$30,000 a month out of the gate with no prior experience is silly. McDonalds made it because he discovered one amazing trick (you won't believe it!) - buy the property first, then build your franchises on top of it. It's the difference between climbing a mountain or standing on an escalator.
timppu: And I guess I should learn more about Android programming too, or hire someone to do it (and then he steals the idea and creates a new facebook). :D
The last thing you want to do is to have a product that relies on a 3rd party. You have to look no further than GOG - it was developed, the developers left, and the current staff has no clue how to fix or change the site (according to their word or someone claiming they said it). You could say it's the root problem of everything on GOG.
Another example was these 2 guys who invested in a security platform. They paid around $50,000-$150,000 to get a developer to make it for them and all of their money was going to this guy. If the guy left their product would die. Your product/service should always be something that YOU control, not just own.