I delete profiles frequently, a combination of unfortunately luck, and perhaps to a greater extent the uncomfortable feeling I get knowing that I'm not quite a public individual, but at the very least have a strong enough network where I feel like someone would I know would know I'm here, and that's just unsettling.Anyway, yeah, so quick disclaimer, I'm "interesting". Not Dos Equis interesting, "interesting".To start off with, I used to be an organic farmer. This happened after I dropped out of Texas A&M. Alas, one of the worst droughts in the history of Texas, along with other things, made me switch my plans. Thus, I came here, switched majors from Horticulture to Computer Science, and somehow wound up becoming a Startup Hipster.Even though I failed, I learned an important lesson in how to jump when you're not entirely sure where you're going to land. You should try it sometime, sometimes the riskiest thing is not to jump at all.What is a Startup Hipster? It's a term I made up due to the fact that I'm creating a web startup, but traction is kinda low, and revenue is nearly non-existent, and I have no office in San Francisco. Startup Hipster. Nonetheless, Startup Culture is fun. I got hooked back when I went to Startup Weekend Santa Fe in March, formed my first startup (Big Huge Breadboard) and got pulled down the rabbit hole. It's never a case of "same sh*tdifferent day" with me. For better or worse, each week brings new changes, new challenges. Without the stimulation I'd probably go (more) insane.As far as normal stuff goes, I don't know, I read, listen to music, watch movies. Stuff. Same as everyone else, I guess. Making a dent in the universe is much more interesting to talk about though.So yeah, I'm cool with friends, friends is good, you probably want to go that route first seeing as spending time with me will likely end up in you having to go down the rabbit hole as well, to a lesser extent anyway. Shooting for something more meaningful, but friends work.