A wise guy will go for things that sounds right to him. If your interests are at building a startup and getting a feel or experience, then pursuing it is a good decision.
I'm not leaving one but I'm turning down an acceptance. I never really cared about the PhD credential; grad school is mostly an excuse to spend a few years working on cool stuff on someone else's dime. But if I work for or start a comparably interesting startup, then I still get that, plus I have a chance to come away rich rather than in debt.
I'm in the middle of attempting to do a PhD and a startup at the same time but it's damn hard. I basically don't sleep. Meeting with my co-founder has become sparse as my research demands increase and it's really affecting our progress -- especially since I'm the coder. In short, if I want this to succeed, I have to leave, which basically I've decided to do at the end of this semester.
Also, by no means should anyone listen to me, but if your PhD environment (e.g. Stanford or in a top tech program), personally I would at least attend a semester -- at the very least make some connections.
And if you're like me and being paid to go to graduate school it's more tempting to stick around (especially if other people's research depends on you or you have a general feeling that you're letting down people, e.g. profs that you got you where you are now). There were times I wavered because of this but at some point I told/convinced myself that 10 years from now these people will understand.
People not in the situation tend to be very gung-ho and tell you things like ... do what your heart feels! seize the day! blah blah blah. I've heard it all.
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[ 6.0 ms ] story [ 47.8 ms ] threadAnd if you're like me and being paid to go to graduate school it's more tempting to stick around (especially if other people's research depends on you or you have a general feeling that you're letting down people, e.g. profs that you got you where you are now). There were times I wavered because of this but at some point I told/convinced myself that 10 years from now these people will understand.
People not in the situation tend to be very gung-ho and tell you things like ... do what your heart feels! seize the day! blah blah blah. I've heard it all.
Yea, if only they were in your shoes.