Guest Post by Ed Rex of Jukedek.com via MediumBecause Snoop didn’t go for the traditional music outlets. Instead, he posted it on Product Hunt, a young site traditionally reserved for discovering and upvoting tech products, and took to the comments board to field questions from his fans.

Exhibit B: Tech entrepreneurs are the new rock stars
Pick up any popular magazine from the nearest newsstand and you’re as likely to see a tech entrepreneur gracing the front cover as you are a musician. They’re holding star-studded parties, dating pop stars and being portrayed in sitcoms. A few years ago, a film about the founding of a websitegrossed $225 million and starred Justin Timberlake.Why have today’s entrepreneurs become celebrities? Gadi Shamia, president of Bizzy.com, puts it pretty well:“Every industry that can turn a 20-something into a millionaire will create rock stars.”Exhibit C: Musicians joining tech companies
There was a time when a role like Director of Creative Innovation would be filled by someone with a PhD in Creative Innovation. These days? Intel give the job to Will.i.am.His motivation for this, and for diving headfirst into the world of tech in general?“I hope none of the kids I send to school only want to do music. The world doesn’t need another musician. They need another Bill Gates.”And he’s not the only one who’s keen to get his hands dirty in the world of tech.The cross-pollination between the worlds of music and tech makes complete sense, as the two industries get more and more similar. Both are fundamentally creative; both attract innovators; both have a famously high failure rate, but offer the tantalising promise of huge riches and overnight stardom. The only question is when it will swing the other way — when will Ev Williams get around to releasing that album he’s been planning. It can’t be long now.
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