I love reading the reactions of new XO owners, who are kids in adult bodies...)

Well, the ones that understand that the laptop is still a work in progress by a largely volunteer community of open-source hackers, that they're supposed to figure things out on their own and tinker, and who don't expect it to replace their $2000 corporate laptop running Excel and Powerpoint with 24/7 tech support reporting overseas to a pyramid hierarchy.

I have decided that I do not want a traditional MBA.

I want to learn how to run an open-source company.

(Yes, I'm still studying engineering education - but I'm becoming more and more convinced that entrepreneurship, particularly that of the socially-responsible type, is a mandatory skill for good hackers - since entrepreneurship is the creation of value, and hacking is an excellent way of learning how to cleverly create and explosively leverage that value while having fun in the meantime. It's another tool. You expand your reach.)

This is a larger statement than it might seem - the most common question I was asked while in the Philippines was "so, when are you going to get your MBA?" My father and all my uncles did it; my cousins are starting to head towards the same, and everyone expects my brother to follow (and I guess they figured I would as well). It almost seems like the traditional career/study path of the Chinese-Filipino kid, although I know it's not the only one.

Trouble is, according to my mother, "you can't get a degree in it." (I don't care.) But there's also the problem of how you learn to do it - which makes me a very, very happy Mel. Because in the absence of a formal program of study, guess what?

I get to make my own.