I'll tell you what I'd do, man, two chicks at the same time, man. Damn straight. I always wanted to do that, man. And I think if I had a million dollars I could hook that up, cause chicks dig a dude with money.<p>All office space quoting aside, if my startup IPOs I'm buying a winery in Napa, preferably Stags Leap district, and a house in the hills of St. Helena with enough land to let my dogs run free and terrorize the neighbors.<p>And I'll probably jump into the restaurant industry.
Step One: Construct a giant concrete sarcophagus similar to the contraption they used to seal off Chernobyl.<p>Step Two: Hire a reliable private investigator to ascertain the location of the target: Creed's rehearsal space.<p>Step Three: Fill the sarcophagus with alligators, poop, and diseased ferrets.<p>Step Four: Rent several hundred industrial-grade helicopters and lower the sarcophagus onto the target.<p>Step Five: Construct a monument honoring the heroism of the alligators and diseased ferrets.
Fund scientific research at a laboratory I direct with my business partner Josh. I think we could knock off a few major diseases like AIDS, or maybe get bacteria effectively generating energy.<p>To cure HIV (idea is Josh's): Start with some adult stem cells from the HIV patient to be treated, specifically the stem cells that produce T cells. Introduce the 32 base pair deletion in the CCR5 gene and grow the cells in culture. These can then be "transplanted" back into the patient. These transplanted stem cells will create HIV immune T cells. Once there are enough immune T cells, the patient will probably still have HIV, but it will not develop into AIDS. There will be no chance of rejection since they are the patient's own cells. Furthermore, since the body does produce antibodies to HIV, these modified T cells may even be able to fight off the HIV.<p>To test this, we would get a mouse line, which are genetically very similar to each other from inbreeding so we won't have to worry about rejection of the transplants, and introduce the human CCR5 receptor into them. This, in theory, will allow the mice to be infected with HIV since HIV attaches to the CCR 5 receptor to enter and infect the cell. If this works, we can then try the technique of taking some of their stem cells, introducing the mutation, transplanting them back in, and see if their T cell count increases or if the levels of HIV decrease. It could also be used as a preventative therapy, which we can also easily test on the mice.
<i> Pay off all my family members debt.
</i> Setup a trust to provide my family members with <i>reasonable</i> salaries. Just enough to let them do what they want, but not enough that they don't have to work.
<i> Buy a giant piece of land and move my parent's and their families on to the same property, if they want too...
</i> Go to university.
<i> Setup a decent course in South Africa to teach kids about programming.
</i> Get that silver Porsche 911 that I've always wanted.
<i> Go to my old work, in my new Porsche, and show it to my ex-boss.
</i> Fund something to fight crime in South Africa.
Well I'm posting on YC right now, so I guess that's one.<p>I'd give it away creatively, always wanted to throw money to the wind in a crowded city street.<p>That and fund domestic programs to help encourage the success of our next generation of kids.
Two possibilities:<p>a.) Physics. Always found it interesting, but not into academia as a way to pay the bills.<p>b.) Feeling poor compared to those bastards with 11 figure net worths.
Do social entrepreneurships stuff. My two main ideas are creating an mturk for non-profits (allow micro-contributions of time/work to charity) and create a careers guidance website that doesn't suck.<p>I realize I could do these now, but trying to juggle full-time job + part-time startups + current non-profit work + real-life is hard enough already without adding more stuff to it.
Never work again (unless I absolutely wanted to, for pure fun and challenge). Invest half (maybe some in startups?). Buy a sizable, but comfortable, house on top of a remote mountain in Montana or Colorado, and use it as my headquarters as I trek across the world.<p>But, some amount of time into my aimless wandering, I would no doubt get the itch again, and have to start creating something.
For me: Travel a lot and get good at photography, buy a Ferrari and get into amateur racing, start a venture capital firm to fund social entrepreneurs (don't know if this is possible yet), own and run a cool new restaurant, be a director/writer for some independent films, do something to make in-class education more fun for high school students (possibly using software).
I'd finally create the fgPhone. You may now speculate about how it will purge the world of all phone carriers and generally redefine telecommunication as we know it. How it works? Well, I'd make the ISO, the W3C and the JCP join forces to create the mother of all committees...
You might consider giving it away to charities and keeping just enough for your financial independence (5 million say). You might be able to preserve your privacy that way.
Such speculation is counterproductive.<p><a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=74030" rel="nofollow">http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=74030</a>